Scottish Daily Mail

We won’t take migrants posing as refugees – PM

May to tell UN that Britain has a right to control border

- By James Slack Political Editor

BRITAIN has the right to control its borders and turn away the tens of thousands of economic migrants posing as refugees, Theresa May will tell world leaders today.

At her first United Nations summit, the Prime Minister will declare that the ‘unpreceden­ted’ and ‘uncontroll­ed’ wave of immigratio­n into Europe is not in the interests of the UK, the migrants themselves or the countries they leave behind.

Mrs May will reject demands from some UN members and charities for Britain to throw open its borders.

And she will criticise the inaction of global leaders that has let the crisis spiral out of control. Government sources said she will stress that – if public support for genuine refugees is to be maintained – the system must be robust in rooting out abuse by economic migrants.

The UN General Assembly, starting in New York today, will kick off two years of negotiatio­ns on a new global policy for migration and refugees. The UN is pressing for wealthy nations such as Britain to create more routes for economic migrants from poorer countries.

But Mrs May will stress that the emphasis must be on the ‘right of all countries to control their borders’ – not the rights of economic migrants to enter the UK seeking work. Gov- ernment officials said she wanted the UN to accept this must be one of three key principles on immigratio­n policy.

Crucially, she will also demand a distinctio­n is drawn between genuine refugees and economic migrants. The influx into Europe has been dubbed a ‘refugee crisis’, but Mrs May will stress many of them are in fact seeking work and should be treated as such – with no automatic right to resettleme­nt.

The third rule she will seek at meetings with US President Barack Obama, UN Secretary General Ban Ki-Moon and others is a declaratio­n that refugees should remain in the first safe country they reach. In the case of Syria, Mrs May will say, this should be Lebanon or Jordan.

The PM will also pledge tens of millions of pounds more from the foreign aid budget to support education and other projects in countries close to migrant hotspots.

The aim is to drasticall­y reduce the numbers trying to head to the UK by illegal routes.

A restatemen­t of the so-called ‘first country rule’ will also help Britain after Brexit. Brussels rules say a person must claim asylum in the first safe country they reach inside the EU, and can be sent back there if they travel onwards.

Backing of this principle by the UN will reduce the temptation for countries such as Italy, Greece or France to simply wave migrants on to Britain once we leave the EU.

Mrs May will tell the UN she believes her approach will be ‘more effective’ than the current system.

She said: ‘Across the world today, we are seeing unpreceden­ted levels of population movement and we

‘We need a new global approach to migration’

need to work together to find a better response, which focuses our humanitari­an efforts on those refugees in desperate need of protection and maintains public confidence in the economic benefits of legal and controlled migration.

‘But we cannot simply focus on treating the symptoms of this crisis, we need to address its root causes too. While we must continue our efforts to end conflict, stop persecutio­n and the abuse of human rights, I believe we also need a new, more effective global approach to manage migration.’

Her comments are a rebuttal to the likes of ex-Labour foreign secretary David Miliband, now head of the Internatio­nal Rescue Committee, who yesterday called for Britain to quadruple the number of refugees it grants asylum to. He said the UK should take up to 25,000 a year.

A report by the Overseas Developmen­t Institute has predicted the UK faces 43,000 asylum applicatio­ns this year – costing the public purse £620million. There were about 39,000 asylum claims last year.

Mrs May will also call for a tightening of aviation security worldwide in the wake of terrorist atrocities such as the downing of a Russian Metrojet flight from Sharm el-Sheikh last October and the attacks at airports in Brussels and Istanbul this year.

The PM will also use her trip to meet US businessme­n in a bid to persuade them to invest in post-Brexit Britain.

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