The PM says there is a "loud minority" who will try to stop government plans to send migrants to Rwanda.
At least nine people are killed in an attack on a camp in eastern DR Congo.
the first asylum seeker has been deported to Rwanda under Rishi Sunak’s migrant crackdown. The migrant, whose name is unknown, was flown out of the UK yesterday evening and arrived in Kigali. Sources admitted to The Times that there was significant risk that they could have absconded now that the deportation bill has passed through
The UK expects to deport 5,700 migrants to Rwanda this year, a senior minister said Tuesday, after the government published new details on the controversial plan. The figures come days after the scheme aimed at deterring migrant arrivals on small boats from northern Europe became law following months of parliamentary
The Tory MP made headlines when appearing confused by the relationship of the two African countries on Question Time.
The Rwanda bill finally became an act of parliament on Thursday after months of pushback and debate
The policing minister appeared to ask an audience member if Rwanda and Congo were different countries.
Mick Lynch blasts government's "useless" Rwanda deportation policy, saying it is the "biggest waste of money this government could think of".
Rishi Sunak’s Rwanda Bill has become law after weeks of parliamentary deadlock, paving the way for deportation flights to get off the ground.
A new law in Britain aims to send people arriving on small boats to Rwanda to have their asylum claims processed. The Prime Minister Rishi Sunak said the plan made clear that people who arrived in Britain illegally would not be able to stay. The United Nations says the bill is the wrong solution and sets a dangerous precedent. Also in the programme: What Ukrainian soldiers on the frontline think about the supply of new American weapons; and Aboriginal people reclaim spears taken from Australia...
The deal with Rwanda has been plagued by setbacks since it was signed two years ago.
Shafaqna English- After two years, three prime ministers, four (or five) home secretaries, one cancelled flight and about 75,000 more people crossing the Channel in small boats, and months of wrangling, UK Parliament passed the government’s controversial plan to tackle small boats. The endless Westminster fight over the policy has