Daily Mail

Cheek of the Irish in asylum storm

We won’t let you send migrants back to Ulster, UK tells Dublin

- By David Barrett, Harriet Line and James Tapsfield

AN Irish government plan to send asylum seekers back to Britain was met with a point-blank refusal last night.

Ministers in the republic have pledged to unveil emergency legislatio­n this week which would allow them to return migrants to Northern Ireland following concern over an up-tick in numbers.

But UK Government sources said there would be no deal unless Brussels also agreed to take back migrants who cross the Channel in small boats.

The republic remains part of the European Union which has consistent­ly blocked British attempts to resolve the Channel crisis with a returns agreement to France.

Irish justice minister Helen McEntee has said that more than 80 per cent of the country’s asylum seekers now cross the border from Northern Ireland.

Prime Minister Rishi Sunak told Sky News the developmen­ts in Ireland showed that the Rwanda asylum scheme was ‘already having an impact because people are worried about coming here’.

A UK Government source said: ‘We won’t accept any asylum returns from the EU via Ireland until the EU accepts that we can send them back to France.

‘We are fully focused on operationa­lising our Rwanda scheme and will continue working with the French to stop the boats from crossing the Channel.’

Conservati­ve MPs expressed incredulit­y at Dublin’s proposals.

Sir John Redwood said ‘it takes my breath away’ that Ireland wants a ‘closed border’ with Northern Ireland ‘having said it was crucial to the Good Friday Agreement and to the postBrexit settlement’. He added: ‘As Britain has always been told, we cannot send migrants back to France and so how on earth do they think they could send migrants back to the UK?

‘Are they going to arrest these people and put them in handcuffs and take them in vans across the border, and then why wouldn’t they just walk back again?’ Former Northern Ireland Secretary Theresa Villiers said: ‘There is a certain amount of irony in Ireland seeking to return migrants to the UK who may have originally arrived from France in a Channel crossing.

‘I hope the Irish government will talk to their fellow EU member state about further action to stop people getting on small boats in the first place.

‘Clearly we all need to work together to solve this problem.’

While David Davis, ex-Brexit secretary, added: ‘This is a Europewide issue and until Europe controls its borders then it’s going to be difficult for any of their constituen­t countries to do it.

‘But secondly, the issue they are facing has arisen directly as a result of their insistence on a so- called open border between the north and the south. Had they taken some of the other routes that I suggested, for one, then we would have a way of controllin­g it, but as it stands we don’t.’

Detailing Ireland’s plans, Taoiseach Simon Harris said it would be ‘quite appropriat­e’ for his country to send asylum seekers back to Northern Ireland. ‘ Every country is entitled to have its own migration policy, but I certainly don’t intend to allow anybody else’s migration policy to affect the integrity of our own one,’ he said.

‘This country will not in any way, shape or form provide a loophole for anybody else’s migration challenges. That’s very clear.

‘My colleague, the minister for justice, will now bring forward legislativ­e proposals to the cabinet on Tuesday that will seek to put in place a new returns policy. We’re going to await the full details of that but it’s one which will effectivel­y allow, again, people to be returned to the United Kingdom. And I think that’s quite appropriat­e. It was always the intention.’

His deputy, Micheal Martin, has pointed the finger at the Rwanda policy, saying that migrants are leaving the UK because they are ‘fearful’ of being sent to the African state.

Northern Ireland Secretary Chris Heaton-Harris is expected to discuss the issue with the Irish foreign minister and others at a routine bilateral meeting in London today.

Northern Ireland minister Steve Baker said: ‘The relationsh­ip with the Irish government is fundamenta­l and I look forward to a constructi­ve conversati­on.’

Home Secretary James Cleverly is also expected to meet his Irish counterpar­ts.

Last month Ireland’s High Court ruled that due to the Rwanda scheme, Britain should not have been designated a safe place to send asylum seekers back to.

This prompted the British Government to ‘entirely refute’ the court’s conclusion. One Home Office source described it as ‘absolutely absurd’.

‘This takes my breath away’

‘Won’t provide a loophole’

 ?? ?? Dangerous crossing: A dinghy overloaded with migrants in the Channel. The Republic of Ireland is part of the EU which has
Dangerous crossing: A dinghy overloaded with migrants in the Channel. The Republic of Ireland is part of the EU which has
 ?? ?? Proposal: Helen McEntee
Proposal: Helen McEntee

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