WORLD / EUROPE
UK, France sign deal to boost cooperation on illegal migration
London to pay Paris 72.2 million euros in 2022-23
Published: Nov 14, 2022 10:39 PM
France and the UK on Monday signed a new agreement to work together to stop migrants crossing the Channel to England in small boats, a source of huge bilateral tension.

Under the agreement, Britain will pay France 72.2 million euros ($74.5 million) in 2022-23 so that Paris can increase by 40 percent the numbers of security forces patrolling its northern beaches, the French Interior Ministry said.

This means that some 350 additional members of the French security forces will be patrolling following the deal, signed in Paris by French Interior Minister Gerald Darmanin and British counterpart Suella Braverman.

London and Paris also pledged to use technological and human resources on the French coast to better detect, monitor and intercept boats. 

They want to collect and use information, in particular from intercepted migrants, to better dismantle smuggling networks and deter crossings. 

For the first time, teams of observers will be deployed on both sides of the Channel to "strengthen common understanding," improve the debriefings of migrants and increase exchanges of information.

The deal comes after the UK government said on Sunday that more than 40,000 migrants have crossed the Channel to Britain so far in 2022, a new record.

The provisional total for 2022 stands at 40,885, most of them Albanians, Iranians and Afghans - well in excess of 2021's 28,561, the Ministry of Defense said.

The agreement reflected a new atmosphere in ties between the France and the UK since British Prime Minister ­Rishi Sunak took the helm, after years of acrimony under his predecessors Boris Johnson and Liz Truss.

Migration has been a particular bone of contention with London accusing Paris of not doing enough to stop migrants crossing the Channel, charges fiercely rejected by French officials.

On Saturday, some 972 people were detected making the perilous crossing in 22 boats, the UK government said.

The figures have been rising for years. Some 299 were detected making the crossing in 2018; 1,843 in 2019; and 8,466 in 2020, according to the UK government.

The rising numbers have caused a logjam in asylum claims and increased accommodation costs estimated by the UK government at 6.8 million pounds  ($7.8 million) a day, straining local services and fueling public anger.