Labor is looking for a deal with another nation state that would see that the British government avoids asylum to a sex offender who is imprisoned on the Chagos Islands.
In the Rwanda-style schedule, 34-year-old Sri Lankan National would be sent to a third country after Labor had refused access to the UK.
This decision was made because of a combination of the potential risk that the man is for the public and is concerned that his admission could undermine the trust of the public in the government's immigration policy.
Unable to return to his home country after being reportedly tortured by the army of the country, the man is currently being sent a six -month punishment for mistreatment and sexual attacks in Diego Garcia.
A judge of the Supreme Court now has the position of the Minister of the Interior supported Yvette Cooper about refusing the man's asylum after he appealed against her initial decision.
Mr. Justice Chamberlain ruled for the Ministry of Foreign Affairs to find an alternative country that is willing to allow the submission of the sex offender.
Since the Chagos Islands are not under the jurisdiction of the European Convention on Human Rights or the Refugee Convention, the asylum seeker could not use them to help his appeal against Mrs. Cooper's decision.
The Ministry of Foreign Affairs is currently in discussion with five states about the possibility that they will take the Tamil -with only one nation so far Labor, according to the Telegraph.

Home Secretary Yvette Cooper and Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer are looking for a way to prevent an asylum from being imprisoned on the Chagos Islands

The man currently serves a prison sentence of six months on the island for abuse and sex attacks

The government is looking for a deal in Rwanda style in which the man would gain access through another nation as part of a wider deal with the UK
The man, who is not mentioned, also suffers from mental health problems and has previously tried to have self -harm and suicide.
The sex offender was previously part of a group of more than 60 Sri Lankans who fled their country in 2021 on a fishing vessel, in which the UK accepted 61 of these asylum seekers last November, even though they were initially searched for an alternative nation to take them.
However, the man was not part of this deal in view of his 24-week punishment for abuse that caused physical injury and his reception of a conditional punishment of 20 months for four offenses of sexual attacks on a woman.
During the man's profession at the British Supreme Court, the government stated that the granting of him would create an “inevitable risk” for public safety and that the trust of the public would be “undermined”.
Mr. Justice Chamberlain accepted that the Tamil man had never had a legal right to enter the UK and that the risks for public safety and trust in the immigration system were 'real'.
When postponing his judgment, Mr. Justice Chamberlain stated: 'That also applies to the risk that the claimant admits in these controversial circumstances would have a tendency to tackle the international dedication of the UK to tackle violence against women and girls.
'The task of evaluating the weight and the importance of avoiding these risks is initially declining for ministers, not for judges. In view of the nature of the risks in question, the court must allow a broad margin for the democratically responsible ministers who, together with their officials, have carried out it '.
It is agreed that the government experiences 'considerable difficulties' in finding an alternative nation that is willing to accept the man in view of his earlier offenses, Mr. Justice Chamberlain said that there was a chance that another state would 'oblige' the UK if 'through the diplomatic channels' in which they had received something in exchange.
Ministers have already negotiated with Mauritian authorities to close meshes that could see the Chagos Islands a back door route to the UK, with further migrants arriving on the islands that are absorbed by Mauritius before they are controlled to St. Helena, a British territory in the Atlantic Ocean.
The MailOnline has contacted the Ministry of Foreign Affairs for comment.