France, UK sign new deal to block migrant Channel crossings

For the first time, teams of observers will be deployed on both sides of the Channel to "strengthen common understanding".

A group of people thought to be migrants wait to be processed after being disembarked by a British Border Force vessel after a boat incident in the Channel, in Dover, England, Monday, Nov 14, 2022.
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A group of people thought to be migrants wait to be processed after being disembarked by a British Border Force vessel after a boat incident in the Channel, in Dover, England, Monday, Nov 14, 2022.

Britain has agreed to pay France another 72.2 million euros ($74.5 million) to prevent migrant boat crossings in the English Channel under a new deal signed that underlines improving ties between the neighbours.

Around 42,000 people — most of them Albanians, Iranians and Afghans — have crossed the Channel to England from France this year.

The figure is well over last year's 28,561, which was a thousand-fold increase from 2018, when migrants and asylum seekers first began sailing inflatables across one of the world's busiest shipping channels.

"There are no quick fixes, but this new arrangement will mean we can significantly increase the number of French gendarmes patrolling the beaches in northern France," Britain's Home Secretary Suella Braverman said in a statement on Monday after signing the accord with her French counterpart Gerald Darmanin.

The extra money will fund a 40 percent rise in the number of security forces patrolling France's northern beaches, meaning an additional 100 people, the French Interior Ministry said.

For the first time, teams of observers will be deployed on both sides of the Channel to "strengthen common understanding".

"The arrangement means, for the first time, specialist UK officers will also be embedded with their French counterparts," the British Interior Ministry said.

British Prime Minister Rishi Sunak said he believed numbers crossing the Channel would fall but that he couldn't predict when exactly results would be seen.

"I am confident that we can get the numbers down. But ... it isn't a single thing that will magically solve this. We can't do it overnight," he told broadcasters ahead of the G20 summit in Bali.

READ MORE: UK minister faces backlash for calling Channel crossings an 'invasion'

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Tensions

Successive British governments have paid France hundreds of millions of euros over the past decade to improve border security on the Channel coast, particularly around the port of Calais.

Past French purchases with UK money include thermal-imaging binoculars, motorbikes, drones and SUVs that are used during beach patrols.

But suspicions have persisted in Britain, fanned by the right-wing media and members of the ruling Conservative party, that Paris is not doing enough.

The agreement reflects warmer ties between France and the UK since Sunak took the helm, after years of acrimony under his predecessors Boris Johnson and Liz Truss.

One of the worst public rows between Johnson and French President Emmanuel Macron came in November last year, when 27 migrants drowned in the Channel.

Sunak and Macron held a cordial first meeting last week on the sidelines of the UN climate summit in Egypt and will meet again this week at the G20 in Indonesia.

The issue of how to manage the flow of asylum seekers and economic migrants from Africa and the Middle East has strained diplomatic ties all over Europe for much of the last decade.

France and Italy, which has elected a new far-right government, clashed last week after Rome refused to let a rescue ship carrying migrants dock at its Mediterranean ports.

Macron and his Italian counterpart Sergio Mattarella urged a return to "full cooperation" on Monday after last week's standoff, which ended when France allowed the boat to disembark its passengers.

READ MORE: Dozens arrested in Europe-wide crackdown on Channel people smuggling gang

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