Illegal migrants will undergo a 30-minute interview with Home Office officials upon their arrival, during which staff are meant to assess whether they meet the deportation criteria.
Up to a third of Rishi Sunak ‘s Cabinet already believe he will have to quit the convention if judges block the flagship policy. Allies of Suella Braverman said she is ready to press for the move.
Simon Danczuk, 56, and Claudine Uwamahoro, 28, tied the knot in a lavish ceremony in Kigali, Rwanda (right) last month. Claudine wants to have two children and then adopt a baby.
The happy couple, who have an age gap of almost 30 years, were joined by more than 100 friends and family at the idyllic Sunday Park gardens in Kigali.
Even if the UK Home Office succeeds in overturning the Court of Appeal decision, migrants will not be removed until January ‘at the very earliest’, it is understood.
An image of the Home Secretary laughing in Kigali was edited into an image of the Auschwitz concentration camp by trolls opposed to the plan.
The Home Secretary pledged to act quickly to remove migrants who arrive in Britain illegally if the Court of Appeal upholds the Rwanda programme’s legality in the coming weeks.
The High Court comprehensively demolished the arguments made against the plan, which is designed to deter migrants from crossing the Channel in small boats.
Today Tory MP Julian Knight said Lineker (pictured) ‘runs roughshod’ over the corporation’s guidelines’ and insisted the BBC needed to bring him to ‘heel’.
The former Chancellor used a pool broadcast interview to elaborate on how he would tackle Channel crossings in small boats as he aims to woo Tories on immigration