U.K.'s Sunak says plan stopping small migrant boats is working
The Hindu
British Prime Minister Rishi Sunak said on June 5 his plan to stop migrants arriving in small boats had reduced crossings by 20%, an update he hopes will ease criticism from his party and in the country over immigration policy.
British Prime Minister Rishi Sunak said on June 5 his plan to stop migrants arriving in small boats had reduced crossings by 20%, an update he hopes will ease criticism from his party and in the country over immigration policy.
Mr. Sunak, who is expected to lead his governing Conservative Party into a national election next year, has promised to "stop the boats" from crossing the English Channel as one of his five pledges after he was propelled to power in October last year.
But he has been criticised by members of his own party and the public for not moving quickly enough, with people protesting about the housing of hundreds of migrants in hotels after record numbers arrived in Britain last year.
"In the five months since I launched the plan, crossings are now down 20% compared to last year," Mr. Sunak told a news conference in southern England.
"The plan is working," he said, adding his government was not complacent and would work hard to make sure parliament passed a new law.
The Opposition Labour Party said Mr. Sunak had failed to clear the backlog of tens of thousands of asylum claims and that 7,600 people had crossed the English Channel so far this year.
Britain has long struggled to curb the number of arrivals on its southern shores, but Sunak is keen to show his plan of securing agreements with other European countries to reduce the numbers arriving can produce results.
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