Two different Balkan nations seen as potential locations for UK migrant returns say they haven’t been requested by the UK.
Sir Keir Starmer revealed on Thursday at a information convention with the Albanian Prime Minister Edi Rama that the UK “is in talks with numerous nations about return hubs”.
However the president of Kosovo and prime minister of North Macedonia – each within the western Balkans, a key migration route from Asia and Africa – advised Sky Information they’d not been requested.
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Vjosa Osmani, the president of Kosovo, mentioned: “There’s been no formal talks with the UK on this situation. It hasn’t been raised up to now.
“We might be open to discussing it, nonetheless I am unable to say greater than that as a result of I do not know the small print. I can not give a solution on a request that hasn’t been made up to now.”
Ms Osmani known as the UK a “steadfast ally”. UK-supplied know-how is being utilized in Kosovo to cease illicit items and weak folks from reaching British shores.
The prime minister of North Macedonia, Hristijan Mickoski, mentioned: “I am not knowledgeable about this. We must always discuss with the UK prime minister later as we speak.”
Requested if formal talks had begun, he mentioned: “No, not but.”
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Near 22,000 folks used the Western Balkans to enter Europe final 12 months, the Overseas Workplace mentioned earlier this 12 months.
There are studies the UK is in talks with as many as 9 nations.
There are six nations within the Western Balkans, that are seen as central to UK efforts to tackling unlawful migration. Croatia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, and Montenegro are the others, alongside Albania, Kosovo and North Macedonia.
David Lammy, the international secretary, visited Kosovo final month and on the identical journey, he signed an settlement with Serbia to crack down on smuggling gangs.
Kosovo, certainly one of Europe’s poorest nations, has agreed a cope with Denmark to take 300 of its international prisoners to serve out their sentences earlier than deportation – in return for 200 million euros. The deal, struck in 2021, shouldn’t be up and working but.
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On Thursday, the Albanian prime minister publicly slapped down the concept of a UK returns hub in his nation, saying their settlement with Italy was a “one-off” deal for Rome – their key ally.
Mr Rama voiced his displeasure with how Albanians had been “stigmatised” within the UK.
Chris Philp, the Conservative shadow house secretary, has accused the UK’s prime minister of being “panic mode” over small boat crossings this 12 months – and restated his stance that the Rwanda deportation scheme must be revived.
Sir Keir later met Mr Mickoski for a one-to-one chat on the summit. Return hubs weren’t talked about within the readout of their dialog.
A Downing Avenue spokeswoman mentioned the nations had “signalled an intent to work extra carefully on shared challenges, together with financial development, commerce, defence and safety”.
“The leaders additionally mentioned North Macedonia’s current settlement to affix the Joint Migration Taskforce, additional boosting regional cooperation to stop irregular migrants transiting the Balkans and disrupting the felony gangs that facilitate them.”