Politics

Britain will payout £480m over the next three years in a deal struck between Rishi Sunak and Emmanuel Macron to tackle small boat Channel crossings, including helping fund a detention centre in France.

The fresh package agreed between the prime minister and the French president to deal with the migrant crisis will also see hundreds more French personnel patrolling the beaches.

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Other measures include:

  • Additional drones, aircraft and surveillance technologies
  • A new 24/7 coordination centre with permanent UK liaison officers
  • Increased cooperation between the National Crime Agency and its French counterpart

The deal was announced after Mr Sunak held talks in Paris with Mr Macron aimed at bolstering efforts to combat the problem.

More than 3,000 people have already made the perilous sea journey this year, with almost 46,000 arriving by unofficial routes in 2022.

The latest funding comes on top of a £63m package to increase patrol officers by 40% four months ago and follows a £55m deal in 2021.

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Earlier in the week, the Tory government unveiled controversial plans to curb Channel crossings would would see refugees arriving by boats detained, removed and banned for life from claiming asylum in the UK.

Mr Sunak said: “Last year I agreed the largest ever small boats deal with France to increase UK-funded patrols by 40%.

“This week I announced measures to ensure nobody who enters the UK illegally can remain here.

“We don’t need to manage this problem, we need to break it.

“And today, we have gone further than ever before to put an end to this disgusting trade in human life.

“Working together, the UK and France will ensure that nobody can exploit our systems with impunity.”

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Mr Macron said they had agreed on a “new ambitious bilateral framework” to tackle the problem.

He added: “What we have decided is heightened co-ordination on our activities.

“We must act together in a fully shared framework to do this with all the Europeans who are concerned by the transit and crossing and some countries from which the traffic is organised.”

It was the first Anglo-French summit to be held for five years, in the wake of the coronavirus pandemic and tensions with Mr Sunak’s predecessors over Brexit.