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Great Britain access to EU crime and illegal migration data reports | Immigration and asylum

A British application for access to common crimes of the European Union and illegal migration data was reportedly rejected in one fell swoop against Keir Starrer's hopes for a “reset” after the Brexit relationships.

The British negotiators had hoped to achieve a contract for access to the Schengen Information System (SIS), a Essential instrument for the exchange of police notifications across borders in the area in which 29 countries have abolished passport checks.

In time, however, it was reported from the time to be excluded in order to enable access to this and the central fingerprint system of the Bloc, Eurodac, to save information on illegal migrants.

Access to the records would be an essential thrust for the attempts by the Labor government to eliminate the asylum sayings and appeal in Great Britain in a time when political opponents in populist law are on the rise.

Last year, the Prime Minister proposed at an annual general assembly of the Interpol in Glasgow that the EU leader had shown interest in granting the British access to the secret database who are looking for people who are looking for asylum.

When asked whether he could recognize the enthusiasm of EU managers about access to Eurodac data in Great Britain as part of a new security contract, he told the journalists: “Yes, there is an appetite to work in more detail.

Daniel Moylan, the spokesman for the conservative transport, said on Monday that the prime minister had occupied his relationships with the EU as a “magical ball” to promise the manifesto of the Labor to “smash” the gangs when it came to illegal channel transitions.

“It doesn't work. He has to take measures in Great Britain and stop sneaking in Brussels,” added Lord Moylan.

A British government spokesman said: “We do not provide a ongoing comment on our discussions with the EU. These are ongoing and covering a wide range of topics.

“Together we want to build a safer, safer and wealthier Great Britain, and we were clear that we would always act in national interest to achieve the best results for Great Britain.”

The European Commission was addressed for a comment.

In the absence of an agreement with the access to Eurodac and Schengen data, an area with potential progress revolves around work and travel lovers. The EU is ready to make essential concessions in the negotiations so that British and European 18 to 30-year-olds can freely travel and work, the Guardian reported last month.

However, there were suggestions that numbers in the British government have access to EU databases to a “red line” in negotiations on such a youth mobility program.

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The former British government signed a contract for working in Great Britain at the beginning of last year with the EU border authority to prevent small boats from crossing the channel.

The lack of access to the Eurodac fingerprint system, in which more than 7 million fingerprint records are saved and lost in Great Britain with the end of the Brexit transition period in December 2020, limited potential cooperation.

Access would help the returns through evidence that individuals in other countries had legal apartments.

Cooperation to combat illegal migration together with the cooperation with terrorist agencies is one of the three pillars on which the British government worked as part of an advertised “reset” of the British EU relationships. The others relate to foreign policy and security cooperation as well as growth as well as trade cooperation.

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