Braverman refuses to let MPs see ‘commercially sensitive’ details of Rwanda deal

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Suella Braverman has refused to allow MPs to be briefed in confidence on the costs of sending asylum seekers to Rwanda for asylum claim processing and resettlement.

Members of the Public Accounts Committee found their efforts to understand the costs underpinning the UK’s agreement with the Rwandan government frustrated this summer, when they were told some “commercially sensitive” figures could not be revealed publicly.

Home Office permanent secretary Sir Matthew Rycroft has now confirmed the home secretary has decided it would not be “appropriate” for the committee to see financial details of the agreement, which she has decided “should remain confidential”.

Appearing before PAC in July, Rycroft was asked about media reports that said deporting an asylum seeker would cost just under £170,000 under the UK-Rwanda Migration and Economic Development Partnership, while it costs £106,000 to process an asylum application domestically.

Rycroft said the figures were “proxy numbers” based on the cost of processing claims in the UK.

But pressed further, the perm sec was unable to give further financial details of the agreement.

Committee member Sir Geoffrey Clifton-Brown asked: “You know the actual costs, but you are not disclosing them. Is that correct?”

“No, it is not,” Rycroft replied.

“There is a bit that we are not disclosing, which is commercially sensitive between the UK government and the government of Rwanda.”

He added that the government’s annual spending through the agreement will be disclosed in the Home Office’s annual report — which, published earlier this month, showed it had paid £140m to the Rwandan government last year all told.

The costs include the initial £120m outlay published at the time then-home secretary Priti Patel signed the deal last year, paid into a Rwandan economic development fund. A further “advance payment” of £20m towards set-up costs for asylum processing will act as “a credit to pay for the anticipated future asylum and operational costs”, according to the report.

However, the report includes no further information on the cost breakdown of the scheme.

Dame Diana Johnson — who chairs the Home Affairs Select Committee and attended PAC’s July evidence session — quizzed Rycroft on why he was unable to share more, given that the partnership is a memorandum of understanding between two governments.

“As I understand it, that is not a commercial contract; it is an arrangement between two governments. I do not quite get… why you cannot give us figures and details,” she said.

Rycroft replied that “despite the public nature of the agreement between the two governments, it is underpinned by some commercially sensitive information, including the cost”.

Unsatisfied with Rycroft’s answers, PAC chair Meg Hillier asked if the committee could view the relevant information in confidence — a suggestion Rycroft said he would put to ministers.

Hillier added: “We have looked at previous Home Office matters. We are a responsible committee, not a reckless one. We have never yet leaked anything; we would not start all of a sudden. It would be helpful to look at the numbers underpinning this, if we could do that.”

When Rycroft said he would put the request to ministers, Hillier noted that “other permanent secretaries have acceded to that request, including in the Home Office, without noticeably going to ministers”.

“There has certainly been no pushback,” she said.

But in a letter to the committee following up on the session, Rycroft said the committee would not be given access to the information it had asked for.

“While I appreciate that the committee may have viewed sensitive documents in the past, I do not believe that it would be appropriate in this instance,” read the letter, which was dated 18 August but published last week.

“As I’m sure you can understand, this partnership between the UK and Rwanda is a topic of significant interest not only within the UK, but also to states considering a similar arrangement, and the home secretary has decided that this information should remain confidential,” he said.

Source: civilserviceworld.com

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