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Syrian refugee slams UK-Rwanda deportation policy and hits back at critics
Syrian refugee and award-winning documentary filmmaker has hit back at critics on social media following his appearance on British television slamming the new
Akkad appeared on Good Morning Britainon Thursday morning to speak out against the British government's scheme to send asylum seekers to . He said UK leaders were trying to “scapegoat” vulnerable people and debunked inflated notions of the country's “refugee crisis”.
In response to comments on Twitter accusing the Syrian of “slagging off” the UK, the former English teacher expressed his love for Britain and said it deserved better.
“When I go on telly to talk about the abhorrent treatment of refugees and migrants in Britain, I’m not ‘slagging off Britain’.
“I have applied for British citizenship, and I’m hoping to get it. I love this country. I just think that we deserve better than this corrupt government,” he wrote on Twitter.
When I go on telly to talk about the abhorrent treatment of refugees and migrants in Britain, I’m not “slagging off Britain.” I have applied for a British citizenship, and I’m hoping to get it. I love this country. I just think that we deserve better than this corrupt government.
— Hassan Akkad حسان عقاد (@hassan_akkad)
Akkad was part of pro-democracy protests in Syria in 2011. He was imprisoned and tortured by the regime, meeting Bashar al-Assad face-to-face at one point.
He later fled Damascus and travelled across Europe via, then on to the UK in 2015.
He told British broadcasters that the threat of deportation to Rwanda will not deter people coming in small boats
announced the Rwanda deportation scheme on Thursday, presenting the plan as a way to “disrupt the business model of [people-smuggling] gangs”.
Critics of the scheme, which include politicians across political parties, refugee charities and immigration lawyers, have expressed grave concerns over the threat to human rights and the potential cost - estimated at £1.4 billion a year.