UK threatens to send migrant boats back to France
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[September 09, 2021]
By Andrew MacAskill and Richard Lough
LONDON/PARIS (Reuters) -Britain has
approved plans to turn away boats illegally carrying migrants to its
shores, deepening a rift with France over how to deal with a surge of
people risking their lives by trying to cross the Channel in small
dinghies.
Hundreds of small boats have attempted the journey from France to
England this year, across one of the world's busiest shipping lanes.
Border officials will be trained to force boats away from British waters
but will deploy the new tactic only when they deem it safe, a British
government official who asked not to be named said on Thursday.
Michael Ellis, Britain's acting attorney-general, will draw up a legal
basis for border officials to deploy the new strategy, the official
said.
Home Secretary Priti Patel told French Interior Minister Gerald Darmanin
that stopping people making their way from France on small boats was her
"number one priority".
Darmanin said Britain must honour both maritime law and commitments made
to France, which include financial payments to help fund French maritime
border patrols.
"France will not accept any practice that goes against maritime law, nor
financial blackmail," the French minister tweeted.
In a letter leaked to British media, Darmanin said forcing boats back
towards the French coast would be dangerous and that "safeguarding human
lives at sea takes priority over considerations of nationality, status
and migratory policy".
Britain's Home Office, or interior ministry, said: "We do not routinely
comment on maritime operational activity."
POLITICALLY CHARGED
Charities said the plans could be illegal.
Channel Rescue, a citizen patrol group that looks for migrants arriving
along the English coast, said international maritime law stipulated that
ships have a clear duty to assist those in distress.
Clare Mosely, founder of the Care4Calais charity, which helps migrants,
said the plan would put the lives of migrants at risk. "They're not
going to want to be sent back. They absolutely could try and jump
overboard," she said.
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Inflatable boats used by migrants to cross the channel are seen in
the harbour in Dover, Britain, September 8, 2021. REUTERS/Peter
Nicholls
The number of migrants crossing the Channel in small
dinghies has risen this year after the British and French
governments clamped down on other forms of illegal entry such as
hiding in the back of trucks crossing from ports in France.
The numbers trying to reach Britain in small boats - about 12,000 so
far in 2021 - are tiny compared with migrant flows into countries
such as Lebanon and Turkey, which host millions of refugees.
But the issue has become a rallying cry for politicians from Prime
Minister Boris Johnson's Conservative Party. Immigration was a
central issue in the referendum decision in 2016 to leave the
European Union.
France and Britain agreed in July to deploy more police and invest
in detection technology to stop Channel crossings. French police
have confiscated more dinghies but they say they cannot completely
prevent departures.
British junior health minister Helen Whately said the government's
focus was still on discouraging migrants from attempting the
journey, rather than turning them back.
Britain's opposition Labour Party criticised the new approach as
putting lives at risk and it said the priority should be to tackle
people-smuggling gangs.
(Reporting by Andrew MacAskill and Richard LoughEditing by William
Schomberg and Timothy Heritage)
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