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UK strikes revised deal with France on Channel migrants

The UK will pay France £8m more a year under a revised deal to try to stop people crossing the English Channel in small boats.

The money will pay for increased surveillance of French beaches, whilst UK police officers will also be able to observe patrols within France.

French officers patrolling the coast to try to stop people setting off will rise from 200 to 300 over five months.

PM Rishi Sunak said he was “confident” the crossings could be brought down.

However, he warned there was no “single thing” that could “fix” the situation, promising “even greater cooperation” with France in the months ahead.

BBC News home affairs correspondent Daniel Sandford said that while the expanded deal would further disrupt the people smugglers operating in France, it was unlikely to end their trade.

The government is coming under increasing pressure to reduce journeys across the Channel, which have risen to record levels this year.

More than 40,000 people have crossed in small boats so far this year, including 1,800 this weekend alone, according to official figures.

Under the new agreement, signed by Home Secretary Suella Braverman in Paris, the UK will pay France £63m this year, up from £55m last year.

It will cover:

  • investment in drones, night vision equipment, and CCTV in French ports to try and prevent crossings
  • funding for detection dogs at ports to identify people trying to enter the UK in lorries
  • investment in reception and removal centres in France

UK observers will be embedded in French control rooms, and French observers embedded in UK control rooms, to help inform each other’s deployments.

The deal had been close for several months but the French government were reluctant to finalise it until there was a stable government in the UK, our correspondent added.

Foreign Secretary James Cleverly said the UK wanted to “significantly” reduce the number of crossings – but declined to set a target for reductions.

Today’s announcement may shift some officers closer to frontline decision-making – but it’s not clear how the deal helps the UK to solve three pressing issues.

Firstly, those new British teams (on top of those deployed since 2018) will only be observers.

They have no operational powers, so even if more boats and smugglers are intercepted, they can’t tell the French what to do with individual migrants who we know may try more than once to cross.

Secondly, some critics say the UK needs to look for a bigger continental-wide deal. But it chose not to be part of the EU’s irregular migrant management policies, as part of Brexit.

The final big challenge is on the UK side of the English Channel. The Home Office’s day-to-day battle to find somewhere to accommodate those who survive the sea is directly linked to the department’s huge backlogs and the delays in dealing with those who arrived before them.

Franck Dhersin, mayor of Teteghem near the coastal town of Dunkirk, said the increase in crossings this year had come despite “a lot of police” watching the coast.

“We are talking about 175km of beaches and dunes, where it is very easy to hide,” he told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme.

Natalie Elphicke, the Conservative MP for Dover, called the new deal “more of the same,” adding it “falls far short of what is needed”.

“The only thing that will tackle this issue is making sure that the boats are stopped in France before they get in the water,” she added.

The higher numbers of migrants making the crossing this year has been partly blamed on a big rise in the number of Albanian nationals making the journey.

So far this year 12,000 Albanians have arrived in the UK using small boats, compared to just 50 in 2020.

The deal comes after weeks of criticism aimed at the government for severe overcrowding at the migrant processing site in Manston, Kent, and for its spending on housing for those waiting for their asylum applications to be completed.

Last month, the Home Affairs Committee heard that the UK is spending almost £7m a day on hotels for asylum seekers, with only 4% of asylum claims by migrants who crossed the Channel last year having been processed.

The latest government figures for the year to the end of June 2022 showed that 103,000 asylum applications were awaiting a decision.

Ms Braverman has previously admitted the system was “broken” and Mr Sunak has said not enough asylum claims were being processed.

More than 40,000 people applying for asylum have waited between one and three years for a decision on their claim, according to a Refugee Council Freedom of Information request, reported in The Guardian.

It also reported that a further 725 migrants have been waiting for more than five years to have their claim processed.

It emerged last month there was severe overcrowding at Manston, with 4,000 people staying there rather than the 1,600 for which the site was intended.

Numbers have since been reduced to less than 1,600, according to immigration minister Robert Jenrick.

On Saturday it emerged people at Manston centre are to be vaccinated against highly contagious and sometimes fatal diphtheria after an outbreak.

source: bbc.com

Ray Charles Marfo

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