Workingman wrote:Sending illegals to a third country outside of Europe or the EU is not the answer. Dealing with them forcefully on the borders is. That is not taking the moral high ground, it is being sensible.
Sending illegals thousands of miles from where they want to be is absolutely the answer. Because there can be no pressure brought to bear to "just let them take that next step". They also let the remainder, trying to come over, now what happens if you are able to take that "next step".
Dealing with them forcefully had never worked, not one single time. Because every time countries have been forced into letting them through on "humanitarian" grounds. Winter is coming, expect the rhetoric to ramp up with it. Especially as lives are lost through the cold.
The ECHR, as you rightly say, is an international organisation. Members may be signed up to it, but they can also ignore it if they want to take the stick for it. It is law and the rulings are considered that way, but not everyone in the world is signed up to it and it has been treated with contempt before. The ECJ is an EU organsiation, everyone in the EU is signed up to it and it has the force of law. Something which is challenged from time to time, but has solid penalties.