UK’s ‘double talk’ on Channel crisis must stop,
says French interior minister
Exclusive: Gérald Darmanin says UK ministers must stop
saying one thing in private while insulting his country in public
Kim
Willsher in Paris
Sun 28 Nov
2021 20.48 GMT
The French
interior minister, Gérald Darmanin, has said British ministers including his
counterpart, Priti Patel, should stop saying one thing in private while
insulting his country in public if there is to be a solution to the crisis in
the Channel.
In an
interview with the Guardian, Darmanin strongly criticised what he called
“double talk” coming out of London and said France was not a “vassal” of the
UK.
“Relations
are good when we speak in private. Every week I have my British counterpart on
the telephone and when we have personal meetings and exchange messages we see
the UK has a serious approach and we have things in common,” Darmanin said.
“Then as
soon as it’s something said in public, in the House of Commons or on social
media and the press, there’s a difference of tone that becomes strongly
unfriendly … and is often different, even diametrically the opposite of what
has been said in private.
“The more
France is used as a punching bag for British domestic politics, and we hear
provocative statements like ‘France has to take back all the immigrants’, the
harder it becomes to find a solution. It’s not only insulting it’s totally
unrealistic.”
Darmanin
was speaking after France convened a meeting of ministers responsible for
immigration from Germany, Holland, Belgium as well as the European commissioner
for internal affairs. Representatives from the EU’s agency for law enforcement
cooperation, Europol, and Frontex, the EU’s border management agency, were also
invited to the hastily arranged summit in Calais on Sunday.
The meeting
was called after 27 people died in the Channel on Wednesday, a tragedy that
shocked both sides of the Channel and has sparked a blame game between London
and Paris.
Patel’s
invitation to the meeting was rescinded on Friday after Boris Johnson published
a letter to Emmanuel Macron calling on France to do more to stop Channel
crossings including allowing British forces to patrol French coastal areas –
which France has refused citing concerns about sovereignty – and to accept
refugees being returned.
Darmanin
said he had “a cordial relationship based on trust” with Patel, but expressed
growing French frustration at the mixed and contradictory messages heard from
Boris Johnson’s government.
This
frustration was voiced by Macron on Friday when he accused the UK of a lack of
seriousness over the Channel crisis. The president was furious that Johnson had
published a letter to him on Twitter, calling on France to take back migrants
and questioning the country’s refusal to allow British forces to join patrols
on France’s northern coast.
Darmanin
reiterated that frustration. “When it comes to the British government in
general, it’s very difficult to work in a calm manner. Relations are fine with
ministers … but unfortunately as soon as there’s a camera or they’re in
parliament we seem to hear them say something very different,” he said.
“I say
again: France is not a subsidiary of the UK, we are a free and equal country
with Great Britain and we want to be treated as such, treated as allies not vassals
and not be hostages to British domestic politics.”
He was
incredulous at Patel’s suggestions that Britain could send naval ships or
forces to turn back refugee boats mid-Channel.
“We do not
imagine for a single instant that Britain could just ignore all the
international conventions and maritime law to put warships in the 30km between
Britain and France to turn back boats when it will mean dozens of people,
pregnant women, children, the elderly, who will die. We cannot imagine for one
second that this could enter a British head,” he said.
The
question of people crossing from France to the UK has poisoned relations
between London and Paris for decades. Tightened security around ferry ports and
the Channel tunnel have driven refugees camped out along France’s northern
coast to increasingly desperate measures. French police tear up makeshift
refugee camps, destroying tents and bussing people elsewhere in France where
they are encouraged to apply for asylum in France. Within weeks, the majority
return to the Calais area.
Darmanin
repeated that France would not accept British forces in France.
“What would
the British say if we suggested having French troops on the English coast? They
would say, quite understandably, that they are a free country and they want
their sovereignty respected and we say the same thing. There’s nothing
extraordinary in that,” he said.
“It’s
better that the British ask themselves why so many migrants want to go to the
UK. This is first because the labour market of your country works in part with
clandestine immigrants because in your country you can work and even pay taxes
without having any identity papers or be in any kind of regular situation.
“If there
was a change in the labour law in Britain tomorrow there would be a lot fewer
migrants who would want to cross over. Second, unfortunately, the British
government today no longer allows any legal way for people to access their
territory as immigrants.”
The UK
government disputes Darmanin’s characterisation of the UK labour market, saying
people have to prove their immigration status to work or rent a property. A
Whitehall source said: “We will this week have more talks with counterparts on
how we can work together to resolve this Europe-wide crisis. Priti’s nationality
and borders bill is the first step in addressing the broken asylum system and
the pull factors it creates.”
Darmanin
confirmed the UK had paid France €17m of the €67m (£57m) agreed in July to
police its northern coast, but added: “Sometimes I read in the British press
that you pay us to intervene, but this costs us €250m a year. Of course €67m
helps, but it cost us a lot more.”
The
minister said he would be reporting to Macron on Monday and had a series of
meetings scheduled for next week on the crisis and specifically how to clamp
down on smuggling networks.
On the
question of returning refugees in return for Britain accepting unaccompanied
minors – a proposal Patel outlined in parliament last week – Darmanin said this
would have to be agreed at European level.
“If we
could send minors to the UK you think we would refuse? No, we would accompany
them all the way. We are ready to consider minors going to the UK in return for
migrants being returned to Belgium, France or Germany or the Netherlands … as
long as it is one for one. … The British say they want to return a number of
migrants for one,” he said.
Darmanin
said screaming headlines in the British press attacking French police and
gendarmes were “insulting”.
“It’s an
insult to France and the French police who risk their lives every day. It’s
terrible to hear things like that from the English side because not only are we
guarding the border for the English, we are suffering the political
consequences of this decision.
“That’s
enough. It has become extremely insulting. We have to stop the slogans, work
seriously.”
Asked if he
was planning to speak to Patel in the next few days, he replied: “There’s no
meeting foreseen but she has my mobile number and I have hers. I tell you
again, I respect her and know her well. All I ask is for the same respect from
the UK so we can talk on the basis of equality and France is not the considered
subservient to the UK.
“From the
moment we are treated normally we can discuss things seriously and everyone
will make an effort to try to understand and try to advance the discussion. At
the moment we have the impression that only France is making an effort.”
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