Rishi Sunak will today meet with the head of the European Court of Human Rights to demand an overhaul of Strasbourg judges’ last-minute rulings.
The Prime Minister will push for reforms to the way the court works when he meets with ECHR president Siofra O’Leary at a Council of Europe summit in Reykjavik.
The Government’s plan to send asylum seekers to Rwanda was blocked last year by a ‘Rule 39’ order from a judge at the Strasbourg-based court.
This saw the first of Britain’s scheduled deportation flights to the African country abandoned following the 11th-hour ruling in June.
Mr Sunak, in his discussions with Justice O’Leary in the Icelandic capital, will press for reforms to last-ditch Rule 39 orders.

Rishi Sunak will meet with the head of the European Court of Human Rights to demand an overhaul of Strasbourg judges’ last-minute rulings

The Government’s plan to send asylum seekers to Rwanda was blocked last year by a ‘Rule 39’ order from a judge at the Strasbourg-based court

Priti Patel, who was then home secretary, signed a migration deal with Rwanda in April last year – but no asylum seekers have yet been sent to the African country
The PM will argue sovereign countries should not be stopped from taking measures to tackle domestic challenges by international judges.
It comes as Mr Sunak is trying to stave off pressure from Tory MPs to withdraw Britain from the ECHR completely.
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He recently bowed to Conservative backbenchers’ demands by unveiling planned laws to allow the UK to sidestep Strasbourg judges’ interim rulings.
But it has been suggested the PM wants to agree reforms with the ECHR so ministers never have to use the controversial powers.
Downing Street said Mr Sunak wants to see an overhaul to the ECHR’s Rule 39 process to provide proper transparency, greater accountability and to ensure decisions can be reconsidered.
The PM will use his address to leaders at the Council of Europe summit to call for greater efforts to tackle illegal migration.
Mr Sunak has vowed to ‘stop the boats’ to end the Channel migrant crisis and is seeking greater cooperation between European capitals and institutions.
He will also hold a series of one-on-one meetings with other national leaders, as well as EU chiefs.
The Council of Europe, of which 46 countries are now members, was established after the Second World War to uphold democracy and freedom across the continent.
Mr Sunak will stress that measures taken by individual countries to address illegal immigration – such as his planned overhaul of Britain’s asylum rules – must go hand-in-hand with international cooperation to establish a global asylum system ‘fit for purpose’.
The PM said ahead of the summit: ‘Every single point on each route used by people traffickers to smuggle people across our continent represents another community struggling to deal with the human cost of this barbaric enterprise.
‘It is very clear that our current international system is not working, and our communities and the world’s most vulnerable people are paying the price.
‘We need to do more to cooperate across borders and across jurisdictions to end illegal migration and stop the boats.
‘I am clear that as an active European nation with a proud history helping those in need, the UK will be at the heart of this.’