More British troops to help reinforce Polish border with Belarus

Defence Secretary Ben Wallace said migrants seeking to cross into the EU were being used as ‘pawns’ by Belarus’ leader Alexander Lukashenko.
Defence Secretary Ben Wallace has said the migrants are being used as pawns (Stefan Rousseau/PA)
PA Wire
David Hughes18 November 2021

More British troops will be deployed to Poland’s border with Belarus to help address the migrant crisis.

Thousands of migrants, mainly from the Middle East, have sought to cross into the European Union at the frontier between Poland and Belarus in recent weeks.

The UK and allies have accused Belarusian president Alexander Lukashenko of engineering the crisis, with Defence Secretary Ben Wallace saying the migrants were being used as “pawns”.

The Daily Telegraph reported that about 100 soldiers from the Royal Engineers will be sent to help physically reinforce the Polish border although details of the deployment are still being worked out.

Mr Wallace, who visited British troops training in Poland, told the newspaper: “Can you imagine going from Iraq, to here, onto a border, not much clothes, not much food, not much money, and then being a pawn in the Belarusian leader’s game? I think that’s heartless and I think it is cruel.”

Western governments have accused Mr Lukashenko, a close ally of Russian President Vladimir Putin, of deliberately encouraging the migrants to breach its borders in retaliation for sanctions the EU has imposed in response to his repressive rule.

Mr Wallace said he believed Moscow would “see what this is about and recognise that, you know, Europe and Nato and the West is alert to what’s going on”.

Meanwhile, Home Secretary Priti Patel lashed out at the European Union, claiming the open borders within the bloc had led to France being “overwhelmed” with migrants seeking to reach the UK.

“Let’s not forget that the real problem on illegal migration flows is the EU has no border protections whatsoever – Schengen open borders,” she told reporters during a trip to the United States.

The Times reported that Ms Patel said she had secured agreement from the French government that it would allow drones and other aerial surveillance and number plate-recognition cameras to track the movements of migrants and people traffickers in northern France.

“I think it’s fair to say they (France) are overwhelmed. That is a fact,” she said.

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