Cameron sets red line in EU talks as migration soars

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AFP, London :
Prime Minister David Cameron said Thursday that restricting welfare payments to EU workers was an “absolute requirement” of his efforts to renegotiate Britain’s relationship with the bloc, as he unveiled a new crackdown on immigration.
The Conservative leader’s comments came as new figures dealt a further blow to his long-held promise to reduce net migration to below 100,000, showing it rose from 209,000 in 2013 to 318,000 last year.
In a speech in London, he outlined new proposals to control immigration that will feature in a bill to be announced in next week’s Queen Speech, where the newly elected government will set out its agenda.
The proposals include making it a criminal offence to work illegally in Britain, a measure that would allow the police to seize wages from undocumented workers and increase pressure on the firms that hire them.
Cameron also repeated a promise to restrict the right of European Union workers from claiming unemployment and in-work welfare benefits – a controversial measure given the bloc’s rules on freedom of movement.
The premier has promised to renegotiate Britain’s relationship with the EU before holding an in-out referendum by 2017, and will start face-to-face discussions at a summit with EU partners in Riga on Friday.
European Commission chief Jean-Claude Juncker has said he is ready to work with Cameron but insists key principles such as freedom of movement are non-negotiable.
“I support free movement,” Cameron said Thursday, but argued that “under the free movement rules, national welfare systems can provide an unintended additional incentive for large migratory movements”.
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