UK–FRANCE MIGRANT DEAL STALLS AS CHANNEL CRISIS DEEPENS £650m Agreement Hits Last-Minute DeadlockNegotiations between the UK and France over a new £650 million deal to curb small-boat crossings in the English Channel have stalled just hours before the current agreement expires. Officials from both sides were locked in talks to replace the existing £475 million deal, signed in 2023, before its midnight deadline. But discussions have hit a wall over how — and when — Britain should release the increased funding to Paris over the next three years. Row Over “Pay-for-Performance”At the heart of the dispute is a demand from Home Secretary Shabana Mahmood to tie payments to tougher enforcement targets. London wants funding linked to higher interception rates of migrant boats — effectively a “pay-for-performance” model. Current figures show French authorities intercept just 33% of crossings, with only 2,064 of 6,233 attempts stopped. Paris is pushing back hard. French officials warn that tying money to interception quotas could encourage risky tactics at sea, potentially endangering lives. France Warns Of Dangerous IncentivesXavier Ducept, France’s general secretary for the sea, said such conditions could backfire. He warned that making funding conditional on performance “could be extremely dangerous for migrants,” raising fears that enforcement could become more aggressive in already perilous waters. Separate Migrant Swap Deal FaltersA parallel “one-in, one-out” migrant returns deal between Prime Minister Keir Starmer and President Emmanuel Macron has also delivered only modest results. So far, 377 migrants have been returned to France, while 380 asylum seekers have been transferred to the UK — figures critics say fall far short of expectations. Dispute Over French Detention CentreFurther tensions have emerged over a planned migrant detention centre in Dunkirk, agreed under the previous deal but still not built due to planning delays. British negotiators are insisting the centre be completed this year as a شرط of any new agreement — and have رفض French requests to help cover staff salaries. Risk Of Surge If Talks CollapseWith no agreement in place, border officials warn crossings could spike if funding dries up. UK money is seen as crucial in financing French patrols along the northern coast, where most crossings originate. Despite reports from French sources claiming negotiations have “failed,” the UK Home Office insists talks are still ongoing and have not yet escalated to ministers. Crisis Far From OverA Home Office spokesperson stressed that France remains Britain’s “most important migration partner” and claimed joint efforts have prevented over 40,000 crossing attempts. But with the clock ticking and divisions widening, the Channel crisis looks set to intensify — with both sides still far apart on how to stop the boats. SOURCE
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