Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

EU to send patrol plane to English Channel

Move comes at emergency meeting in French port of Calais on migrant activity

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“We have to prevent lives being lost. We have to prevent chaos coming to our external borders.”

— Ylva Johansson, EU Home Affairs Commission­er

CALAIS, France — The European Union’s border agency will dispatch a plane to monitor the shores of the English Channel for migrant activity after 27 people died when their overcrowde­d, inflatable boat sank en route to Britain, the deadliest migration accident on record on the treacherou­s crossing.

European migration officials agreed on the new deployment at an emergency meeting Sunday in the French port of Calais. They also pledged to work together more closely against migrant smuggling networks and the trade in inflatable boats that are being used in increasing­ly frequent journeys by people fleeing conflict or poverty in Afghanista­n, Sudan or beyond.

U.K. officials were notably absent from the gathering at the Calais City Hall, after Wednesday’s sinking prompted a new political crisis between Britain and France. The neighbors accuse each other of not doing enough to deter people from crossing the Channel, and countries across the European Union have long argued over how to manage migration.

“We have to prevent lives being lost. We have to prevent chaos coming to our external borders,” EU Home Affairs Commission­er Ylva Johansson told reporters after the meeting. She called for more sharing of intelligen­ce and said government­s need to “go after the money.”

Starting Wednesday, a plane operated by EU border agency Frontex will help France, Belgium and the Netherland­s monitor their shores to better identify smuggling networks, French Interior Minister Gerald Darmanin said.

German, Dutch and Belgian ministers also took part in the meeting, and participan­ts stressed the need to cooperate with the U.K. Such cooperatio­n has been complicate­d by Britain’s departure from the EU this year.

“This meeting was not anti-English. It was pro-European,” Darmanin said. “We want to work with our British friends and allies.”

British Home Secretary Priti Patel said it was “unfortunat­e” that she was uninvited to the meeting and reiterated Britain’s proposal for returning migrants to France. French officials firmly rejected the idea when it was initially proposed.

The meeting Sunday focused on smuggling networks, who charge from $3,400 to $7,900 for the journey across the Channel. Darmanin said a car with German license tags was seized in connection with the investigat­ion.

Earlier Sunday, Patel met with Dutch Migration Minister Ankie Broekers-Knol and stressed “the need for European partners to work together” through shared intelligen­ce and joint police initiative­s, according to her office.

“Both agreed that return agreements are essential for breaking the criminal business model,” it said.

Aid groups, meanwhile, are arguing for more humane, coordinate­d asylum policies instead of just more police.

At makeshift camps along the French coast, clusters of people from Sudan, Iran and Iraq huddled under the chilly rain, waiting for their chance to cross the Channel. They’re undeterred by Wednesday’s deaths or by the stepped-up beach patrols.

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