France scraps UK talks over Johnson migrants
letter
Published4
minutes ago
France's interior minister has cancelled talks with UK
Home Secretary Priti Patel after Prime Minister Boris Johnson called on France
to take back migrants who crossed the Channel.
In an escalation of the political crisis after the
deaths of 27 people in the Channel, Gérald Darmanin said France was
disappointed by the letter.
"Making it public made it even worse."
Mr Johnson
set out five steps in his letter to President Emmanuel Macron to avoid a repeat
of Wednesday's tragedy.
"We
consider the British prime minister's public letter unacceptable and counter to
our discussions between partners," Mr Darmanin said in a statement.
"As a
result Priti Patel is no longer invited," he added.
Belgium,
the Netherlands, Germany and the European Commission are all due to attend
Sunday's summit in Calais.
Within
hours of Mr Johnson's letter being posted on social media, the French
government's anger was clear. Government spokesman Gabriel Attal said the
letter was "poor in substance, and totally out of place", failing to
respect all the work that France had done on the Channel coast.
In his
letter to Mr Macron, the UK prime minister outlined five steps he wanted to see
taken:
- Joint patrols to prevent more boats from leaving French beaches
- deploying more advanced technology, like sensors and radar
- reciprocal maritime patrols in each other's territorial waters and airborne surveillance
- deepening the work of the countries' joint intelligence cell
- immediate work on a bilateral returns agreement with France, alongside talks to establish a UK-EU returns agreement
"An
agreement with France to take back migrants who cross the Channel through this
dangerous route would have an immediate and significant impact," Mr
Johnson said.
UK
Transport Secretary Grant Shapps defended the letter, telling BBC Breakfast
that "friends and neighbours" had to work together.
"No
nation can tackle this alone. I hope the French will reconsider. It's in our
interests. It's in their interests. It's certainly in the interests of people
who are being people trafficked to the UK, with these tragic scenes we're
seeing - people losing their lives."
Calais MP
Pierre-Henri earlier Dumont dismissed the British idea of joint patrols as
"crazy" and said it would not change anything along the vast
shoreline.
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