Britain's Prime Minister Rishi Sunak speaks to an audience as he attends a Q&A session at a boxing club in Chelmsford in the county of Essex, east of England, on March 27, 2023. PHOTO | AFP
Agence France-Presse is an international news agency headquartered in Paris, France.
Summary
·
The draft
law intends to outlaw asylum claims by all illegal arrivals, while anyone who
is deported after making the dangerous journey from France would be banned from
re-entering the UK
Strasbourg. A new immigration bill in the UK that aims to stop migrants crossing the Channel illegally on small boats from France is "incompatible" with Britain's international obligations, Europe's top rights body said on Monday.
In a letter addressed to both chambers of the UK parliament, the Council of Europe (COE) Commissioner for Human Rights, Dunja Mijatovic, urged lawmakers to vote against the
bill proposed by Prime Minister Rishi Sunak's right-wing Conservative government.It is now "essential" that
lawmakers "prevent legislation that is incompatible with the UK's international
obligations being passed", she said in the letter.
The draft law intends to outlaw
asylum claims by all illegal arrivals, while anyone who is deported after
making the dangerous journey from France would be banned from re-entering the
UK.
Migrants would be returned to their
home country or sent on to a "safe" destination such as Rwanda, under
a hotly contested partnership agreed by London.
"By effectively preventing
people arriving irregularly from having their asylum claims assessed, the bill
would strip away one of the essential building blocks of the protection
system," said Mijatovic.
If passed, the bill would "add
to the already significant regression of the protection of the human
rights" of refugees, asylum seekers and migrants in the UK and
"provide an incentive" to other states in Europe and beyond to adopt
similar measures, she said.
UK interior minister Suella
Braverman has acknowledged that the government "pushed the boundaries of
international law" to draft the bill.
The Sunak government, which has been
languishing in the polls, has been under domestic pressure to stop the large
numbers crossing the Channel.
Even after Brexit, Britain remains a
member of the COE, which is a separate entity from the European Union.
London must abide by the European
Convention on Human Rights which is overseen by the ECHR.
Mijatovic said the bill would create
"clear and direct tension" with the human rights standards
established under the ECHR.
Provisions in the bill indicating
that the domestic legislation should supersede the ECHR risk "creating
divergence with the case law of the ECHR", she said.
There have been suggestions that the
UK could walk out of the ECHR but the Sunak government has insisted this is not
on the agenda and has been in talks with the court.
The United Nations High Commissioner
for Human Rights, Volker Turk, said earlier this month he was "deeply
concerned" by the legislation.
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