France accuses UK employers of ‘quasi-modern
slavery’ amid Channel migrant crisis
Cross-Channel migration is ‘first and foremost an
English issue,’ said Interior Minister Gérald Darmanin.
BY JULES
DARMANIN
November
29, 2021 11:18 am
French
Europe Minister Clément Beaune on Monday accused the U.K. of "an economic
model of, sometimes, quasi-modern slavery" amid the ongoing migrant crisis
in the English Channel.
Also on
Monday morning, French Interior Minister Gérald Darmanin called on the U.K. to
"change its legislation" on migration in order to solve the crisis,
which daily has seen hundreds of people in small boats taking the dangerous sea
route from Calais to reach England.
Darmanin
said the question of cross-Channel migration was "first and foremost an
English issue" in an interview with BFMTV: "We need the U.K. to open
the door to a legal path for immigration to their country."
"I'm
not to take any decision for the British people, but we need to discuss it with
the English," he said.
Migrants
are choosing to take a risky path "because there is no legal path for
immigrants to go to the U.K. ... and because it's possible to work without an
ID card in England," the minister added. "One of the engines of the
English economic policy — not all of it, obviously — is to employ workers
illegally," he said.
"We're
asking the British to change their framework," Beaune said at the same time
on France Inter. "There is — let's say it — an economic model of,
sometimes, quasi-modern slavery or at least of illegal work that is very
strong." Exploitation of illegal workers "is more prevalent in the
U.K. than [in France], because there are less checks," Beaune said.
"If
the British are not going back to a certain number of checks, on more humane,
more compliant labor market regulation, this attraction will remain,"
Beaune added.
Tensions
around migration between France and the U.K. have heightened after a small boat
sank last Wednesday, resulting in the death of 27 people. U.K. Prime Minister
Boris Johnson on Thursday published an open letter on Twitter calling on French
President Emmanuel Macron to strike a deal with the U.K. “to allow all illegal
migrants who cross the Channel to be returned.”
Following
Johnson's letter, U.K. Home Secretary Priti Patel was uninvited from a meeting
between European ministers on Sunday. "I am surprised by the methods when
they are not serious," Macron said on Friday.
"When
you have exchanges and are able to advance on serious topics together, and that
you realize some moments later that a letter — that no one had mentioned before
— is published on Twitter … before the president of the Republic has received
it, it’s a bit peculiar,” Darmanin said.
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