Agreement starts
London and Paris want to slow down migration on the English Channel
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“One out, one in”: With a new method, France and Great Britain want to reduce migration over the English Channel. This is to smash the shell shop.
From this Wednesday, France and Great Britain start on the English Channel with a new process to combat irregular migration. A signed agreement enables the British to send migrants back to France with the help of smugglers in small boats with the help of smugglers. In return for every return, another person with a relationship to Great Britain, for example through family relationships, can enter a safe route.
The pilot project follows for years and less successful efforts to stop the immigration of Great Britain with an increased police operation on the northern French coast. London transferred Paris Million sums to monitor the coast with additional officials and modern technology. Again and again migrants are killed in crossings.
Schleuser networks are to be smashed
“I confirm the determination of France to stop and save the migration flows,” said France’s Interior Minister Bruno Retailleau. The goal of the pilot project is to smash the smuggling networks and prevent the tragedies from preventing the tragedies, which occurs regularly when boats sink during the crossing.
According to media reports, around 50 people should be sent back to France every week. At the start of the project, the British Interior Minister Yvette Cooper said that the government did not want to provide any information about the number of migrants who are to be returned to France as part of the agreement via the Areagger Canal. The BBC 4 broadcaster told the Interior Minister that this could play criminal gangs. “We do not indicate a total number of programs.”
France wants to deport withdrawed migrants
France wants to postpone the migrants withdrawn from Great Britain on the basis of the so -called Dublin regulation – after that, afterwards, the EU state is usually responsible for an asylum application on whose land seekers have first entered European soil – to the first -time rates in the EU. In the first six months of this year, around 21,100 people came to Great Britain via the English Channel – an increase of almost 56 percent compared to the same period last year and more than ever before.
dpa
Source: Stern

I have been working in the news industry for over 6 years, first as a reporter and now as an editor. I have covered politics extensively, and my work has appeared in major newspapers and online news outlets around the world. In addition to my writing, I also contribute regularly to 24 Hours World.