Joachim Stamp, the minister of migration, proposed that deported migrants from Germany be placed in the same housing that was initially planned for the now-canceled UK program.
The Islamic State has claimed responsibility for the killing of three people at a fair in Solingen by a Syrian national, putting pressure on German authorities to address illegal immigration.
Furthermore, in Germany, a far-right party has won a regional election for the first time since World War II.
The idea of the deportation threat to Kigali was to discourage migrants from using small boats to reach the English Channel.
Rwanda was eager to pursue the notion with Germany going forward, according to Mr. Stamp.
Except for Rwanda, we do not yet have a third country that has come forward, he stated in a Table Media podcast.
People who are crossing the eastern borders of the EU are most likely to be processed in the African nation.
But UK Home Office minister Dame Angela Eagle told News that the plan “wasn’t workable” and advised Germany against making the move.
She went on, “It was a ruse. For four people to willingly travel to Rwanda, the previous administration paid out £700 million. They were about to invest literally billions more, but it was failing.