The highest court in the UK will scrutinise the government's multi-million pound Rwanda deportation policy, after a previous hearing ruled it unlawful.
The Supreme Court will hear of the "trauma" and "torture" faced by asylum seekers as it begins to scrutinise the government's Rwanda deportation policy.
The Supreme Court’s scrutiny of the government’s multimillion-pound plans to deport asylum seekers comes nearly 18 months after they were first announced.Ongoing legal battles have meant no migrants have been sent to the East African nation under the policy. The court will hear from "vulnerable" asylum seekers from Syria, Iran and Iraq, who were was previously told they would be moved to Rwanda, their lawyers said earlier in the months-long litigation.'Pass of death': The migrants risking it all for a chance of new life in France
AHA also said he was victim to “control by violent people smugglers” and has been separated from his family since fleeing Syria. His lawyers said he “cannot read or write”, is a “victim of torture” and has been diagnosed with post-traumatic stress disorder.He said on Wednesday: “We are by no means where we want to be but don’t let anyone tell you we aren’t making progress, we are and we will get there.
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