Post-Brexit Britain needs friends to halt Channel
crossings
London is struggling to get the cooperation it needs
to enforce hard line.
BY CRISTINA
GALLARDO
November
25, 2021 2:52 pm
LONDON —
Britain wants a tough migration policy, but it can’t have one without help from
its neighbors.
Pressure on
Boris Johnson’s government to act is mounting again after dozens of
undocumented migrants drowned in the English Channel on Wednesday, in the worst
disaster on record involving migrants in the sea separating France and the U.K.
Yet the
tragedy looks unlikely to stop the political squabbling which has so far
hindered efforts to curb the sharply rising numbers of arrivals in the U.K. on
small boats.
Johnson
also faces domestic pressure from his own MPs after it was revealed that the
man responsible for a bomb detonated in the city of Liverpool nearly two weeks
ago was a migrant whose asylum claim had been rejected in 2014.
In the
aftermath of the Channel drownings, the British prime minister urged Europe to
engage with Britain to break the business model of people smugglers who he
warned “are literally getting away with murder.”
Johnson
offered to increase British support to tackle smugglers on French beaches and
said he wants to speed up legislation aimed at breaking the business model of
smugglers by ramping up sentences, penalties and border controls, as well as
tackling backlogs of asylum claims.
But that
bill contains two controversial proposals — returning migrants to the first
country deemed safe that they entered en route to the U.K., and the creation of
offshore processing centers for asylum seekers. Those plans rely on finding
international partners willing to take these people. It’s here that observers
see a big problem for Britain, no matter how tough its rhetoric.
Brexit bad
blood
Steve
Valdez-Symonds, refugee and migrant rights director at Amnesty International,
said the U.K.’s stance as revealed in those proposals is that asylum should be
“someone else’s responsibility.”
That, he
argued, is encouraging other countries to either take the same attitude or to
feel there is a limit to how much they can do. “If that continues, the U.K.
will be unlikely to find any partners willing to receive more people into their
systems.”
The British
government believes there is no shortage of EU countries demanding a stronger
response to the migration crisis — but it accuses Brussels of failing to act.
The U.K. is engaging bilaterally with Austria, Belgium, France, Germany,
Greece, Italy, the Netherlands and Poland on asylum because of a “lack of
leadership on this issue” from the European Commission, British Home Secretary
Priti Patel told the House of Commons Monday.
British
frustration with the Commission is two-fold: London argues the EU Border and
Coast Guard Agency (Frontex) should be more active in France — a call also made
by French President Emmanuel Macron on Wednesday night — and it accuses the EU
executive of refusing to discuss a new post-Brexit asylum pact with the U.K.
Since Britain’s
EU departure, the country no longer takes part in the EU’s Dublin agreement on
migration, which allowed for 289 returns of undocumented migrants in 2020. This
year, returns to the EU plummeted to just five, according to U.K. Immigration
Minister Tom Pursglove.
Emmanuel
Comte, a historian of European migration at the Barcelona Centre for
International Affairs, argues that through Brexit “the British government has
achieved, at an excessive cost, more control of declining inflows from EU
countries, but it has lost access to useful EU instruments to control rising
inflows from third countries.”
A British
government official said the U.K. pursued a returns agreement with France but
was reminded it should talk to Brussels. London is now trying to reach a new
accord with the EU, but the official said the Commission “doesn’t want to
discuss it.” The U.K. hopes an overarching agreement with the EU on returns can
be reached once France takes over the presidency of the Council of the EU in
January.
“Getting
the European Commission to do things is slightly more difficult,” the official
said. “The French have told us they want to work on returns with us, but it is
an EU competency, we have to wait until they agree with the Commission. They
accepted the need to do something because the Dublin system does not
particularly work for them either.”
Macron has
said his government will try to reform the EU’s border control and migration
policy, but he has not confirmed whether he would favor a pact with the
British.
The
European Commission did not respond to a request for comment.
Bilateral
tensions
The U.K.
has reached returns agreements with India, Pakistan and Albania. But
Conservative MPs continue to vent their anger at Paris. Tory MP Peter Bone
urged Johnson to “put the maximum pressure on France” to accept more returns.
In the
meantime, Johnson and Macron have blamed each other’s governments for the
recent rise in Channel crossings.
Asylum
claims in the U.K. reached their highest number in nearly two decades,
according to Home Office data released Thursday. The department received 37,562
applications in the year to September.
The British
premier said Wednesday that Britain has had “difficulties persuading” the
French to take measures London believes would be effective in curbing
crossings. In turn, the French president said he expected Britain to “fully
cooperate and forbear from instrumentalizing a dramatic situation for political
purposes.”
Bilateral
conversations with France on migration have been regular but difficult, with
Macron accusing Britain of oscillating “between partnership and provocation.”
The two
countries agree on the need to fight smugglers; prevent the establishment of
lasting camps in northern France; and work closely with countries of origin to
prevent departures in the first place.
But the
U.K. government believes French police and border officers are overwhelmed and
need more support. Earlier this year, the British government committed to pay
£54 million in installments to the French to help them deal with the crisis. On
Wednesday, Johnson restated a U.K. offer to deploy British Border Force
officers along the French coast.
Yet where
Britain sees a weakness, Paris sees an attempt to interfere in its sovereignty
and place all the blame on the French. Pierre-Henri Dumont, MP for Calais, told
the BBC: “I’m not sure the British people would accept it the other way round,
with the French army patrolling the British shore.”
On
Thursday, Macron announced plans to mobilize army reserves and said the French
government is going to ask for “extra help” from the British “because all these
men and these women don’t want to stay in France.”
Paris
argues that London must make it harder for undocumented migrants to find work
in the U.K., and says it should allow migrants to apply for asylum in Britain
while they are in France — removing one reason for embarking on the dangerous
journey.
Under
British rules, an asylum seeker can see their claim rejected if they applied
from an EU country, or traveled to the U.K. through a country the Home Office
deems safe.
But
Johnson’s official spokesman repeated the familiar refrain Thursday that
allowing migrants to claim U.K. asylum from France “would create an additional
pull factor” toward Calais and the surrounding area.
Valdez-Symonds
of Amnesty fears Britain's continued hardline approach will fail to curb risky
Channel crossings. “We will only have more people making more journeys, only
more secretly — and living probably extremely dangerous and exploited lives in
this country — because they will not come forward to seek asylum for fear or
what will happen to them," he argued.
Lack of
interest
For the
time being, the U.K. has considered about 10 countries as potential hosts for
offshore processing centers, most of them in northern Africa and the Balkans.
Yet not a single one has shown an interest in hosting these facilities,
Immigration Minister Kevin Foster admitted Wednesday in an interview with the
BBC.
Although
the department refuses to name any country, officials and a British minister
have this year pointed to Rwanda, Turkey, Morocco and Albania as countries with
whom negotiations are taking place. All these nations have denied being in talks
with the U.K. government to host these facilities.
Albania’s
Minister for Europe and Foreign Affairs Olta Xhaçka called the reports “fake
news” while Prime Minister Edi Rama said Albania — which aims to join the EU —
would “never” be a place where rich countries can open camps for their
migrants.
Even
jurisdictions with much closer relationships with Britain, such as Gibraltar, a
British overseas territory, and the Isle of Man, a self-governing crown
dependency, have rejected suggestions they could house such facilities. The
government also considered Ascension Island and St Helena, two remote U.K.
territories in the Atlantic Ocean, as potential hosts but decided not to
proceed.
Valdez-Symonds
argues that there’s no incentive for these places to cooperate unless the U.K.
is willing to pay them potentially large sums of money.
The same
U.K. official quoted above denied that Britain lacks allies, and suggested
instead that domestic politics plays a role in some of the refusals. “Their
comms are a matter for them,” the official said of potential hosts. “It’s early
days. There are countries out there that we feel there’s potential to explore
this further with.”
Privately,
Conservative MPs are also questioning the track record of Patel, the U.K.'s
home secretary.
But the
U.K. official countered that tackling the issue of Channel crossings requires
exactly the kind of “long-term reform” which Patel is working on. “I’ve seen a
lot of sniping from the sidelines in the last few days but not real policy
solutions for any of the problems that we’re facing that the home secretary
hasn’t already suggested,” they added.
On
Wednesday, Johnson reiterated his confidence in Patel. However, Downing Street
has tasked Cabinet Office Minister Steve Barclay with supporting the Home
Office’s work on Channel crossings in order to, in the words of Johnson's
spokesperson, "step up efforts to prevent those crossings."
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