Belgium, UK agree to strengthen immigration cooperation amid Channel crisis

Belgium, UK agree to strengthen immigration cooperation amid Channel crisis | INFBusiness.com

Belgium and Britain said on Tuesday (30 November) they will cooperate more closely to fight illegal migration, days after France snubbed Britain and said it needed to get serious before talks on the matter could resume.

France and Britain were already at loggerheads over immigration, post-Brexit trading rules and fishing rights and last week relations soured further after 27 people died trying to cross the Channel.

France cancelled an invitation to Britain’s interior minister Priti Patel to attend a meeting on Sunday with EU counterparts – including Belgium – to discuss the issue, saying Britain was not being serious in its response to the crisis.

Belgium, UK agree to strengthen immigration cooperation amid Channel crisis | INFBusiness.com

Belgium, UK agree to strengthen immigration cooperation amid Channel crisis | INFBusiness.com

Furious Macron scraps UK migrant talks after 'unacceptable' letter

France on Friday (26 November) scrapped planned talks with the UK about migrant crossings after an “unacceptable” letter from British Prime Minister Boris Johnson, pushing relations to new lows after 27 people died in the Channel.

But on Tuesday, Britain and Belgium said they were ready to work more closely on the matter, as part of a broader declaration on bilateral cooperation.

“In cooperation with neighbouring countries, we will improve joint working on illegal flows, including to disrupt human trafficking and human smuggling networks and prevent loss of life,” the statement read.

United Kingdom-Belgium Joint Declaration on Bilateral Cooperation, signed by PM Boris Johnson and PM Alexander De Croo ????https://t.co/KXpicJadRL

— Vincenzo DM (@DM_Vincenzo) November 30, 2021

“We will work to promote multilateral dialogue with our neighbours to enhance cooperation on small boats in order to prevent illegal sea crossing towards the UK, including through operational cooperation, intelligence sharing, surveillance and preventing secondary movements within the Schengen area.”

The number of migrants crossing the Channel has surged to 25,776 in 2021, up from 8,461 in 2020 and 1,835 in 2019, according to tallies compiled by the BBC using Home Office data.

The spike in numbers has angered Britain, which accuses France of doing too little to stem the flow. Paris says that once migrants reach the shores of the channel, it is too late to prevent them crossing.

Source: euractiv.com

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