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London and Paris must act together in securing safe passage for migrants
But they are making a serious mistake. Johnson is under domestic pressure because of his failure to respond to mounting accusations of sleaze and corruption against his own Conservative government. And Macron is facing a rightwing-dominated presidential election next April in which it serves his own interests in sounding tough in relations with France’s closest ally on the other side of La Manche.
Tensions between London and Paris have risen to a new high in recent months. Brexit – the key to Johnson’s election victory in December 2019 – has been the source of much unease. The subsequent row over fishing rights has had a disproportionately negative effect. And the US deal with Australia (backed by the UK) over submarines that replaced a pricey French contract didn’t help either.
The issue of migration is particularly delicate in the UK on account of Brexit. One of the main rallying cries of the "Vote Leave" campaign in the 2016 referendum to depart from the EU had been for the UK to "take back control" over its own borders. The reason for the slogan was that before Brexit, the country's immigration laws had to be in line with EU legislation and allow for freedom of movement and work for EU citizens coming to the UK in exchange of allowing Brits to settle anywhere in the EU.
Another effect of Brexit was the UK’s departure from Europol, an EU-wide policing organisation that was involved in sharing intelligence about people smugglers and intercepting their communications.
Last Wednesday’s disaster was the deadliest since the Channel became a route for migrants from Africa, the Middle East and Asia, who have been using small boats to reach England from France since 2018. Seventeen men, seven women, including one who was pregnant, and three minors died when their inflatable boat lost air and took on water off the port of Calais last Wednesday.
With three times the number of migrants attempting to cross the Channel this year than last, Johnson and his Home Secretary, Priti Patel, have repeatedly promised to step up patrols and intelligence gathering. But the French authorities have criticised Britain's handling of the crisis, including so-called “push back tactics,” which see boats forcibly turned back to France. Paris has so far rejected UK calls for “boots on the ground” – British police stationed in northern France to cooperate with local forces.
According to the Macron government, 31,500 people attempted to leave for Britain since the start of the year and 7,800 people have been rescued at sea, figures which doubled since August. So far this year an estimated 25,700 people have made the dangerous 25-mile journey across the English Channel – the busiest sea-lane in the entire world - to Britain. Most are from Iran, Iraq, Syria, and Afghanistan, as well as parts of sub-Saharan Africa such as Eritrea, Ethiopia, Sudan and South Sudan.
In Britain, Johnson's government is coming under intense pressure, including from its own supporters, to reduce the numbers. That explains why Johnson, having written to Macron, then posted the letter on Twitter, attracting fury from the Elysee and the disinviting of Patel from a meeting with her French counterpart Gerald Darmanin in Calais.
Patel, herself of Indian origin, is perceived to be xenophobic. She has described people fleeing their own war-ravaged or impoverished countries in search of a better life as “economic migrants”. But Darmanin also said that the British government should do more to make the UK “less attractive” to asylum seekers and France would not be held hostage to British politics – the same narrow-minded approach.
Johnson’s government is keen to revive an idea for joint British-French patrols on the coast of northern France, which has in the past been rejected by Paris. Another central issue is the British legal requirement that anyone seeking to claim asylum in the UK must be physically present in the country, creating an imperative to reach it but no safe means to do so.
That means that the concept of “safe passage” has become the key to change to allow migrants who want to seek asylum in the UK, so people do not have to turn to profit-seeking smugglers to avoid dying in the Channel, which is in danger of becoming a cemetery. Migration charities and experts have called on the Johnson government to change its approach and commit to an expansion of safe routes for men, women and children in desperate need of protection.
The Labour opposition rightly criticised both the UK and French governments, saying they are "engaging in a blame game while children drown off our coastline". Johnson and Macron should be ashamed of themselves, stop thinking solely about their political ambitions, and cooperate in finding a workable solution to dealing with this escalating and shameful crisis.
BY: IAN BLACK
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NATO Secretary-General Ex...
- November 7, 2024
Amid growing anxiety among several European countries participating in NATO over Donald Trump's victory in the U.S. presidential election, NATO Secretary-General Mark Rutte stated he looks forward to sitting down with Trump.
Upon arriving to participate in the summit of the European Political Community, which includes around forty heads of state in Budapest, he said, "I look forward to sitting with the elected U.S. president and seeing how we will collectively ensure we meet challenges, including the threats from Russia and North Korea." He also noted that the strengthening of ties between Russia and North Korea poses a threat to the United States as well, according to reports from Agence France-Presse.
Before Trump's victory, Rutte expressed confidence that a united Washington would remain part of the defensive alliance, even if Trump became the 47th president of the United States. In an interview with German public broadcaster ZDF last Monday night, he stated that both Republicans and Democrats understand that NATO serves not only the security of Europe but also that of America. He added that both candidates are aware that the security of the United States is closely tied to NATO.
On Wednesday, NATO congratulated Trump on his victory but did not address the Ukrainian issue.
It is noteworthy that the relationship between the elected U.S. president and the defense alliance was not the best during his first term in the White House. Trump criticized NATO member states multiple times and even hinted at withdrawing from the alliance unless they increased their financial contributions.
Additionally, the issue of the Russian-Ukrainian war is one of the matters that complicate relations between the two sides, especially since Trump has repeatedly stated that he can end this ongoing conflict, which began in 2022, quickly. He implied that he had a peace plan between Kyiv and Moscow, while his vice president, JD Vance, revealed aspects of that plan, which stipulated Ukraine's commitment not to join NATO, thereby sending reassuring signals to the Russians.
Furthermore, many NATO member states in Europe fear that Trump might halt military aid to Ukraine after he previously criticized the U.S. for pouring funds into supporting Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky.
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