Sunak seals migration deal with Macron to move past acrimony

11 March 2023 - 12:00 By Ania Nussbaum and Ellen Milligan
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Britain's Prime Minister Rishi Sunak.
Britain's Prime Minister Rishi Sunak.
Image: Kin Cheung/Pool via REUTERS

Rishi Sunak struck a multiyear deal with Emmanuel Macron to curb cross-Channel immigration in small boats as the two former investment bankers sought to turn the page on years of Anglo-French acrimony. 

During a visit to the Elysee Palace in Paris, the British prime minister pledged at least €541m (about R11bn) over the next three years to help France prevent migrant boats from leaving French beaches bound for the UK. For the first time, Britain will help pay for a detention centre in France.

“Criminal gangs should not get to decide who comes to our countries,” Sunak said during a joint press conference with Macron on Friday. “We’ve taken our co-operation to an unprecedented level to tackle this shared challenge.”

Rishi Sunak struck a multiyear deal with Emmanuel Macron to curb cross-Channel immigration in small boats as the leaders sought to end years of Anglo-French acrimony.
Rishi Sunak struck a multiyear deal with Emmanuel Macron to curb cross-Channel immigration in small boats as the leaders sought to end years of Anglo-French acrimony.
Image: Bloomberg

The agreement will help improve relations between the two neighbours that have been poisoned by Brexit and a surge in recent years of cross-channel immigration. It comes less than two weeks after the British premier struck a fresh deal with the EE on Northern Ireland’s post-Brexit trading arrangements, in another sign of thawing tensions.

Sunak, whose parents are immigrants from east Africa of Indian origin, and Macron, have vowed to curb the numbers of people reaching their countries clandestinely. Sunak is especially under pressure to act after making stopping the small boats one of his five priorities in government. Earlier this week, he announced a new legislation he said will prevent migrants crossing the English Channel in small boats.

The pair appears to have moved away from previous blame games. 

The new deal paves the way for greater intelligence sharing, the use of new technologies including drones and hundreds more police officers patrolling the coast — more than double personnel levels, according to a UK government statement. Permanent UK liaison officers will also be posted to a new co-ordination centre.

“The level of ambition of this new plan is exactly what we need,” Macron said.

It builds on a previous agreement that the two countries renewed in November, just weeks after Sunak took office. Under that, the UK agreed to pay €72m in 2022 and 2023 for France to beef up controls on French beaches from where migrants are departing. The two had already agreed to share more intelligence to track smugglers, and use detection drone and dogs.

The agreement was part of the 2018 Sandhurst treaty, whereby the two powers agreed to meet annually to share their views to secure borders and broker how much the UK should contribute each year. A French official in Macron’s office said earlier this week that a multiyear framework would be more efficient, allowing France to plan in advance its ground forces.

Tensions over migrants between London and Paris — which reached a high when French interior minister Gerald Darmanin said in 2021 that Britain’s labour policy was too attractive for illegal workers — won’t vanish overnight however. The next bone of contention could concern a so-called returns agreement, with the UK government aiming to send migrants back to France and elsewhere.

While the Elysee official questioned the proposal’s compliance with international law, Sunak told reporters on the way to Paris on Friday that he was hoping to have a constructive discussion with the EU to send migrants arriving in the UK back to the bloc. 

On Friday, Sunak and Macron also pledged closer co-operation when it comes to defence and nuclear energy.

The warmer relations are in marked contrast to Sunak’s immediate two predecessors. During her campaign for the leadership over the summer, Liz Truss said the jury was still out on whether Macron was a friend or a foe, while Boris Johnson before her once reportedly called the French “turds”.

“This is a moment of reunion, reconnection and a new start,” Macron said. “It marks a shared desire to speak to each other, co-ordinate better, build new prospects together in this context.”

In an interview published Friday by the French newspaper Le Figaro, Sunak called Macron a “great friend” and said the two sometimes text about soccer. When they met earlier on Friday, they exchanged signed rugby shirts, and in the press conference, Sunak concluded his opening remarks by saying “merci, mon ami” — French for “thank you, my friend”, before the two men shook hands and embraced.

Bloomberg


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