Cape Argus

‘UK must take more asylum seekers’

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PARIS: France expects Britain to agree to take more asylum seekers and pay more for border security to maintain a frontier on the French side of the Channel, a French government official has said.

Britain’s border was extended into France under a 2003 bilateral treaty known as the Le Touquet accord. But a migration crisis and the Brexit vote to leave the European Union have made the arrangemen­t an increasing source of friction.

The deal will be on the table on Thursday when President Emmanuel Macron holds talks with British Prime Minister Theresa May.

Asked if concrete announceme­nts are expected at the talks, the source said: “Yes. But is it all finalised? Absolutely not.”

France’s Interior Minister, Gérard Collomb, who has taken the lead on talks, told Le Parisen newspaper he hoped an “additional protocol” to supplement the Le Touquet accord could be agreed upon. His comments indicated Macron had dropped a campaign promise to renegotiat­e the Le Touquet accord in full.

“We’re still negotiatin­g. Nothing is locked in yet. The British have shaken on nothing but there’s a lot of pressure on them,” said the official.

If no deal can be struck, France could tear up the Le Touquet accord and the two countries would have to reinstate borders on each side of the English Channel, the source said.

“Our understand­ing is that they will pay more. The question is how much and for what,” said the source. “We have let them know of our needs and a figure. We’re talking tens of millions of euros.”

Some pro-Brexit MPs from Britain’s ruling Conservati­ve Party have branded suggestion­s London pay more as “absurd”.

A British Home Office (interior ministry) spokespers­on said: “We work closely with the French authoritie­s to reduce migrant pressures and target criminal gangs involved in people traffickin­g, both in northern France and further afield.”

Macron will travel to Britain two days after visiting the northern port city of Calais, the final stopping point for migrants striving to cross the English Channel. – Reuters

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