UK and Ireland asylum seeker row: Don’t send police to Irish border, Sunak tells Dublin, as he warns there must be no 'cherry-picking' of international agreements

The prime minister has urged the Irish government not to send police into border areas amid a row over asylum seekers crossing from Northern Ireland into the Republic.
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Rishi Sunak said the Irish government “must uphold its promises” to avoid a hard border on the island of Ireland and avoid setting up checkpoints to prevent asylum seekers entering the country.

Diplomatic tensions between London and Dublin have increased in recent days after Ireland’s justice minister claimed there had been an upsurge in asylum seekers crossing the border following the passing of the UK’s Safety of Rwanda Act.

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On Tuesday, the Irish government said 100 police officers would be made available for frontline immigration enforcement duties, although Dublin insisted they would not be “assigned to physically police the border with Northern Ireland”.

Answering questions in the Commons, Mr Sunak said ministers were seeking “urgent clarification that there will be no disruption or police checkpoints at or near the border” and that there must not be “cherry-picking of important international agreements”.

He added: “Now, it’s no surprise that our robust approach to illegal migration is providing a deterrent but the answer is not sending police to villages in Donegal. It’s to work with us in partnership to strengthen our external borders all around the Common Travel Area that we share.”

His comments came in response to a question from DUP MP Carla Lockhart, who accused the Irish government of “hypocrisy” given its stance on the border during Brexit negotiations.

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Prime minister Rishi Sunak speaking during prime minister's questions in the House of Commons today. Mr Sunak was answering a question from DUP MP Carla Lockhart on the row between the UK and Ireland over asylum seekers crossing from Northern Ireland into the Republic. He warned the Irish government that sending police to villages in Donegal was not the answerPrime minister Rishi Sunak speaking during prime minister's questions in the House of Commons today. Mr Sunak was answering a question from DUP MP Carla Lockhart on the row between the UK and Ireland over asylum seekers crossing from Northern Ireland into the Republic. He warned the Irish government that sending police to villages in Donegal was not the answer
Prime minister Rishi Sunak speaking during prime minister's questions in the House of Commons today. Mr Sunak was answering a question from DUP MP Carla Lockhart on the row between the UK and Ireland over asylum seekers crossing from Northern Ireland into the Republic. He warned the Irish government that sending police to villages in Donegal was not the answer

Downing Street has repeatedly stressed that the UK is under no legal obligation to accept returns of asylum seekers from Ireland, and would not do so while France continued to refuse to accept returns from the UK.

There is an operational agreement on the Common Travel Area with Ireland which Dublin says provides for returning asylum seekers, but the Prime Minister’s official spokesman said this was not legally binding and nobody had been returned to the UK under its terms.

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One person has been returned to Ireland under the agreement since it was signed four years ago, the spokesman added.

On Wednesday, the spokesman said: “We obviously work with them on a range of issues, including in relation to security issues in the Common Travel Area, but the UK has no obligation to accept returns.”

Labour said it agreed with the Government that the UK should not accept returns from Ireland “while Britain is not able to return people who arrive here from the EU”.

The Government has claimed the reported increase in asylum seekers entering Ireland from Northern Ireland demonstrated that its Rwanda scheme was already acting as a deterrent.

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Irish premier Simon Harris has previously said Ireland will not “provide a loophole” for other countries’ migration “challenges”.

It is not clear how many asylum seekers have crossed the border into Ireland.

Irish deputy prime minister Micheal Martin said his colleague Helen McEntee’s figure of 80% of total border crossings was not “evidenced-based”, while DUP MP Ian Paisley told the Commons it was “made up”.

Downing Street said it did not have data on crossings as the border is not policed.

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