Britain's Supreme Court has allowed the government to move forward with a plan to deport asylum seekers from the UK to Rwanda, as asylum seekers have been waiting in the country for weeks in a state of shock and fear.

The court said in its decision on Friday that there was no evidence of mistreatment or forcible return of the deportees during the transitional period they will spend in Rwanda, according to what was reported by the BBC.

On the other hand, the court allowed the representatives of those concerned to resort to the appeals court to decide on his decision, at the latest, on Monday, one day before the scheduled flight departure for Kigali on June 14.

And the British Home Secretary Priti Patel announced last week that June 14 will be set as the date for the first flight carrying the first batch of irregular migrants to Rwanda, two months after it concluded an "immigration agreement" with the African country to receive migrants and asylum seekers in Britain.

Patel stressed that the decision includes first those who crossed the British borders illegally and dangerously and without any justification, especially those who crossed the English Channel (the Channel) from France in rubber boats.


And last April, British Prime Minister Boris Johnson revealed the new approach to dealing with asylum seekers in his country.

He said he had made what he called a "world-leading asylum offer" that would protect the UK's borders, end the smuggling of illegal people and restore control of illegal immigration.

While the identity of those included in the plan has not been disclosed, the sending of asylum seekers to Rwanda will mainly include unmarried adult males, according to what the BBC reported last April.

The British government's decision to deport refugees to Rwanda raised a state of shock and fear among Arab asylum seekers.

According to data obtained by Al Jazeera Net from parliamentary sources following up on the file of deportation of asylum seekers to Rwanda, the first batch to be deported will be from about 15 Syrian asylum seekers, all of whom arrived in the country alone and not accompanied by their families.

Three institutions, the Union of Public and Commercial Services (PCS), Care4Calais, and Detention Action, announced their support for 4 asylum seekers to be deported this week, in order to file their grievance with the Supreme Court, which It has the power to annul the decision of the British Home Office and prevent their deportation.