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File image of Rishi Sunak meeting with Emmanuel Macron ahead of a bilateral meeting during the Cop27 summit. Alamy Stock Photo
migrant crossings

French and UK leaders try to overcome Brexit tensions at first high-level summit in five years

Emmanuel Macron and Rishi Sunak met today in Paris to discuss Ukraine and migration.

LAST UPDATE | 10 Mar 2023

THE LEADERS OF the UK and France met in Paris today for a bridge-building summit, aimed at overcoming years of Brexit tensions and agreeing a new pact on cross-Channel migration.

British Prime Minister Rishi Sunak hailed as “essential” the relationship between the two neighbours ahead of talks, where the pair were also expected to vow more support for Ukraine and security in the Asia-Pacific region, Downing Street said.

French President Emmanuel Macron welcomed Sunak at the Elysee Palace after he travelled to Paris by train from London.

It is the first UK-French summit in five years and comes after Sunak became prime minister in October following the stormy tenures of Liz Truss and Boris Johnson.

Macron’s antipathy to the Brexit figurehead Johnson was barely concealed, while Truss said she didn’t know whether the French leader was a “friend or foe” during her campaign to become prime minister.

But both sides now see an opportunity to reset the “Entente Cordiale” between western Europe’s two nuclear powers.

“Our deep history, our proximity and our shared global outlook mean that a firm partnership between the UK and France is not just valuable, it is essential,” Sunak said in a statement late last night.

He confirmed that the European Political Community — a Macron initiative formed after Russia invaded Ukraine a year ago — will be hosted by Britain following an October summit in Spain.

Britain and France are working jointly to deter “illegal migration”, Sunak said.

Sunak is under fierce pressure to thwart thousands of asylum seekers crossing the Channel and this week unveiled legislation that critics said would make Britain an international outlaw on refugee rights.

Britain has been paying France to help patrol the Channel border, and a summit pact will focus on “increasing the resources deployed to manage this common border, with multi-year financing”, an aide to Macron said.

The Times newspaper reported that the deal would be for around £200 million spread out over three years.

Although Britain’s exit from the European Union still bedevils ties, recent developments, including the agreement to settle the EU trading status of Northern Ireland, have created goodwill.

The two neighbours have also found common cause in supporting Ukraine against Russia.

Sunak and Macron will agree to “further coordinate both the supply of weapons to Ukraine and the training of Ukrainian marines”, the Downing Street statement said.

As well as Ukrainian soldiers and marines, Britain has undertaken to train Ukrainian pilots, although Western allies are wary of offering fighter jets to Kyiv.

“Bolstering these efforts through further joint UK and French training could see thousands more Ukrainians brought to battlefield readiness,” the statement said.

The leaders will further look at ensuring a “permanent presence of likeminded European partners” in the Asia-Pacific, “whose security is indivisible from that of Europe”, it said.

That includes coordinating the deployment of France’s Charles de Gaulle aircraft carrier with the Royal Navy’s brand-new carriers — HMS Queen Elizabeth and HMS Prince of Wales.

As part of the Sunak government’s post-Brexit outreach, the summit paves the way for the UK’s King Charles to make France his first foreign destination when he heads there on a state visit at the end of March.

© AFP 2023

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