![UK law to send asylum seekers to Rwanda passed after months of wrangling](https://www.aljazeera.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/04/AFP__20240422__34PW7W3__v1__HighRes__FilesBritainRwandaPoliticsMigrants-1713840866.jpg?resize=1920%2C1440)
UK law to send asylum seekers to Rwanda passed after months of wrangling
Al Jazeera
The controversial law is expected to come into force within days with the first deportation flights in weeks.
A controversial United Kingdom government bill to send asylum seekers to Rwanda has finally secured the approval of the upper house of parliament, which had demanded numerous amendments, as Prime Minister Rishi Sunak promised to start the first flights to Kigali within weeks.
Sunak hopes the legislation will boost the dismal fortunes of his Conservative Party in an election widely expected to take place later this year.
The House of Lords, an unelected chamber, had long refused to back the divisive plan without additional safeguards, but relented after Sunak said the government would force parliament to sit as late into Monday night as necessary to get the bill passed.
“No ifs, no buts. These flights are going to Rwanda,” Sunak told a news conference earlier in the day.
The Rwanda scheme, criticised by United Nations human rights experts and groups supporting asylum seekers, has been beset by legal challenges ever since it was first proposed as a way to curb the number of asylum seekers crossing the English Channel in small boats.