It's a hangar usually dedicated to film shoots with an old airplane fuselage as a backdrop, but the Interior Ministry agents who train there are very real.
Right now, somewhere in the United Kingdom, a dress rehearsal for the implementation of the government's highly controversial bill: the outsourcing of its migrants to Rwanda is taking place, out of sight.
Revolt, fights, demonstration… All scenarios are studied.
In preparation for D-day.
However, a huge question mark surrounds this text of law emptied of its substance by dint of amendments by the Lords, after having been adopted by the deputies of the House of Commons on January 17.
Infamy for some, innovation for others, will the Rwanda plan revolutionize the right to asylum or does it have no chance of being applied even if the law is adopted by Wednesday, at end of the standoff between the two parliamentary chambers?
Two years after its birth, the suspense remains total over the outcome of the project.
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