Cape Times

Macron visits Calais migrants

Accepts ‘difficulty of their plight’

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FRENCH President Emmanuel Macron visited a migrant reception centre and quizzed refugees in Calais yesterday,, taking stock of the pressure on the Channel port ahead of a summit with British Prime Minister Theresa May this week.

Calais and the surroundin­g Hauts-de-France region are among the poorest areas of France, with unemployme­nt above the national average and public resources strained by an influx of migrants from Africa and the Middle East.

While the previous government bulldozed a vast tented camp, dubbed the “jungle” and once home to around 8 000 people on the outskirts of the town in late 2016, several hundred asylum seekers, refugees and economic migrants remain in Calais and others continue to come, usually seeking to make it to Britain.

Interior minister Gérard Collomb, joining Macron for the visit, told locals the town would “bounce back” and not be known “just for the issue of migrants and migration”.

He promised more investment in reception centres and asylum processing, and emphasised numbers were being brought down.

“There were once 7 000 to 8 000 migrants in Calais, but now we’re talking about 400,” he said. “We need a balanced policy that combines reception and inspection.”

Macron will meet Britain’s May in England tomorrow to discuss Brexit, migration and the Le Touquet accord, a 2003 treaty that allows Britain to establish its border in France, and France to run its border checks in Britain.

French officials believe the accord favours Britain and has contribute­d to the gathering of migrants to Calais, the closest point to the UK’s shores.

From Calais, many try to jump on trucks and trains going under the Channel into Britain, just 30km away.

At the meeting with May, Macron is expected to push for a new “additional protocol” to supplement the Le Touquet treaty, that would involve Britain paying more to France for border security and accepting more asylum seekers.

Britain says it already provides extra security to France. Pro-Brexit politician­s from Britain’s governing Conservati­ve Party have dismissed suggestion­s London should pay more as “absurd”.

If agreement cannot be reached, both Britain and France have the right to back out of the treaty, which would mean reverting to hard national borders.

Such a move would reinforce the complete separation of Britain from Europe once the exit from the European Union comes into force in March 2019.

Macron’s government is drafting legislatio­n to tighten immigratio­n rules, in part a response to soaring asylum requests.

Last year there were more than 100 000 applicatio­ns, a record high.

While the president has been criticised for taking a tough line on migration, he sent a conciliato­ry message yesterday.

Meeting migrants from Sudan who had reached France via Italy and Libya, he acknowledg­ed the difficulty of their plight.

“We have a responsibi­lity to protect those who are in danger,” he was quoted as saying by BFMTV.

“(But) we can’t welcome millions of people who live in peace in their countries.”

 ?? PICTURE: REUTERS ?? French President Emmanuel Macron talks to Ahmed Adam, left, from Sudan during his visit to a migrant centre in Croisilles, northern France yesterday. With them is translator Elyas Ali from Chad.
PICTURE: REUTERS French President Emmanuel Macron talks to Ahmed Adam, left, from Sudan during his visit to a migrant centre in Croisilles, northern France yesterday. With them is translator Elyas Ali from Chad.

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