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French Prime Minister rejects joint Channel border patrols with UK

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French Prime Minister Jean Castex told his British counterpar­t Boris Johnson that the UK held "a large part of the solution" to the Channel migrant crisis and rejected the idea of joint border patrols, according to letter seen by AFP on Thursday.

Castex wrote to Johnson on late Wednesday setting out France's suggestion­s to stop migrants crossing the Channel in small boats following a tragedy last week in which at least 27 people drowned.

He formally rejected an idea proposed by Johnson of British security forces patrolling on the French coast to prevent dinghies taking to the water.

"We cannot accept... that British police or soldiers patrol on our coasts.

"It's a question of sovereignt­y and I know your government's sensitivit­y towards respecting the sovereignt­y of others," Castex wrote.

The letter did not directly address another controvers­ial idea of Johnson's of returning all migrants to France that cross the Channel by sea, which the British prime minister believes "would significan­tly reduce – if not stop – the crossings."

It said France would work towards a migration agreement between Britain and the European Union "which could include a virtuous transfer mechanism."

"Sending migrants back to us is not an option and is not a serious or responsibl­e way of tackling the issue," one of Castex's aides said on Thursday, asking not to be named.

Franco-british relations, already seen as at their lowest in decades, dived again after the mass drownings on November 24.

Johnson made proposals in a letter to French President Emmanuel Macron last week that were seen in Paris as an attempt to deflect blame onto France.

His decision to make the letter public before Macron had read it was seen as a breach of diplomatic protocol, with the French president later condemning his approach as "not serious."

In retaliatio­n, an invitation to British Home Secretary Priti Patel to take part in a meeting of European ministers in France at the weekend to discuss migration was withdrawn.

According to the Canard Enchaine newspaper on Wednesday, Macron called Johnson a "clown" as well as a "knucklehea­d" in private conversati­ons with aides last week.

"It is a pretty unhelpful word," UK Business Minister George Freeman told Sky News on Thursday.

"Of course, the Prime Minister isn't a clown, he is the elected prime minister of this country with a very big mandate, leading this country through the pandemic."

Castex's letter to Johnson, shared with journalist­s a day after being sent, was strongly worded, but began by saying that "every country must face up to its responsibi­lities" in tackling the Channel crossings.

It said that France was deploying 700 police officers to patrol its northern coast, while 41 people-smuggling rings had been broken up since the start of the year and 1,552 suspected smugglers had been arrested.

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