Daily Mail

1M MORE MIGRANTS ARE ON THEIR WAY

As Gove says Britain has no control over who we let in, borders chief warns of huge new influx to Europe this year

- By James Slack in London and John Stevens in Brussels

A MILLION more migrants will arrive in Europe this year, the EU’s borders chief declared yesterday. Fabrice Leggeri said it was impossible to halt the flood of arrivals who already number 110,000 this year. ‘Experience has shown that fences and patrols at sea do not stop the refugees,’ he added.

Michael Gove said EU immigratio­n policies were causing misery, with free movement diktats stopping the UK choosing who it wanted to let in. The Justice Sec- retary said this meant Britain could neither be ‘humane’ to refugees nor ‘wise’ economical­ly.

Ministers are braced today for embarrassi­ng statistics that will put the influx into Britain at sky-high levels. Net migration is expected to be 300,000 or more – making a mockery of David Cameron’s pledge in 2010 to reduce it to the ‘tens of

thousands’. In his first public comments since declaring for the Out campaign, Mr Gove said the right of all EU citizens to come to the UK was tying this country’s hands.

Britain is forced to turn away non-EU migrants with skills the country wants and is left with less room to let in genuine refugees. EU nationals are adding 180,000 to the population every year.

Mr Gove told the BBC: ‘ This is an issue where I believe that control should be with politician­s here who are accountabl­e to the British people. One of the problems with the EU migration policy at the moment is that it’s creating misery on our borders, a terrible situation which means we are not in a position to be both humane and also wise with respect to our economic future.

‘That’s why we need to leave, take back control and decide who we want to stay in this country and at what rate. Our immigratio­n policy means that we have some people who can come into this country who we might want to say no to and others, who we might want to attract, who can’t currently come in.

‘So it’s not for me a matter of numbers, it’s

‘We need to take back control’

a matter of the type of people that we want in this country. That’s why I think we need to leave, take back control and decide who we want in this country and at what rate.’

EU leaders are now worried that tens of thousands of refugees are poised to start making their way through Europe via Romania, Ukraine and Poland. Donald Tusk, the president of the European Council, said the handling of the crisis had ‘key significan­ce for the referendum campaign’.

Mr Leggeri, who heads the Frontex border agency, said: ‘It would be a success if the refugee numbers for this year remained stable in comparison to 2015. We are confrontin­g a situation in Syria this year which will result in another million refugees.’

Despite immigratio­n being the public’s number one concern, the PM has refused to seek any limits on the principle of free movement in his EU negotiatio­n.

The latest net migration statistics due to be published by the ONS may beat the previous high of 336,000. The record was set for the year to June 2015. The latest figures will cover the 12-month period to the end of September last year. Some ministers fear that, for the first time, net migration from inside the EU may be higher than the figure for people who are from the rest of the world.

Last week it emerged the number of EU nationals working in the UK had rocketed by 215,000 in a single year. They included more than 120,000 Eastern Europeans, almost 50,000 of them Romanians and Bulgarians. Almost 1.2million Eastern Europeans now work in the UK. The total number of EU workers has rocketed by 840,000 to a record two million since Mr Cameron came to power on a pledge to curb mass migration.

Employment minister Priti Patel said: ‘Being a member of the EU has meant that the UK has lost control of its borders and its immigratio­n policy. As a result of EU rules, the UK is open to 500million people from other EU member states who can live and work in the UK with no restrictio­ns.

‘The mass influx of migrants from Eastern Europe in particular has contribute­d to pressures on the UK’s housing stock, public services and infrastruc­ture.’

The Czech Republic’s prime minister yesterday warned that Britain leaving the EU would bring a wave of nationalis­m and separatism. ‘Rightist extremists and nationalis­ts would open this theme sooner or later in the Czech Republic and other states,’ said Bohuslav Sobotka.

 ??  ?? Human tide: Desperate migrants try to get through a fence erected on the border between Greece and Macedonia
Human tide: Desperate migrants try to get through a fence erected on the border between Greece and Macedonia

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom