Our website use cookies to improve and personalize your experience and to display advertisements (if any). Our website may also include cookies from third parties like Google Adsense, Google Analytics, and Youtube. By using the website, you consent to the use of cookies.

UK’s Sunak brings back Cameron, sacks Braverman

UK’s Sunak brings back Cameron, sacks Braverman

BRITISH Prime Minister Rishi Sunak brought back former leader David Cameron as foreign minister in a reshuffle triggered by his firing of interior minister Suella Braverman after her criticism of police threatened his authority. It was the latest reset for a prime minister whose Conservative Party is badly lagging the Labour Party before an election expected next year. Cameron's return suggested Sunak wanted to bring in a more centrist, experienced hand rather than appease the populist right of his party which backed Braverman. It also reawakens divisive debate over Brexit: Cameron held the referendum on European Union membership in 2016…
Read More
British interior minister Braverman says Rwanda is safe for migrants

British interior minister Braverman says Rwanda is safe for migrants

BRITAIN'S interior minister Suella Braverman said she was convinced Rwanda was a safe country to resettle migrants who had arrived in Britain illegally but she declined to set any deadline for the first deportations to the country. The British government is hoping to send thousands of migrants more than 4,000 miles away to the East African country as part of a 120 million pound ($148 million) deal to deter asylum seekers crossing the English Channel from France in small boats. The plan was announced in April 2022, but the first deportation flight was blocked by an injunction from the European…
Read More
UK interior minister visits Rwanda to expand deportation plan

UK interior minister visits Rwanda to expand deportation plan

PHILBERT GIRINEMA BRITISH interior minister Suella Braverman visited Rwanda to expand a deal under which the east African country will accept migrants who arrive in Britain without permission if British courts confirm that the proposals are legal. Britain's government wants to send thousands of migrants more than 4,000 miles away (6,400 km) to Rwanda as part of a 120 million pound ($146 million) deal agreed upon with Rwanda last year. No deportations have occurred while campaigners challenge the policy's legality in the courts. Many charities say the proposal is costly and impractical and will criminalise thousands of genuine refugees with few routes…
Read More