The UK overseas aid budget should be used to stabilise countries and discourage mass migration, the defence secretary has said.
Speaking
to the BBC, Michael Fallon said "well-focused aid" could "prevent
conflict breaking out... so that we don't have to fish people out of the
Mediterranean later on".
EU states should also pool intelligence on trafficking gangs, he said.
More than 1,800 migrants have died in the Mediterranean so far this year.
That is a 20-fold increase on the same period in 2014.
Britain
has not signed up to proposals from the European Commission to
redistribute tens of thousands of asylum seekers who have arrived in
Italy and Greece to other countries.
Crisis 'roots'
Mr
Fallon told The Andrew Marr Show mass migration was a "European
problem" and so far only the "symptoms" were being dealt with.
"I
think we can pool the intelligence we all have as European countries on
these trafficking gangs, we can get more information on the roots, we
can tackle their financing," he said.
"And we can use our overseas
aid budget - and this is where it should be used - to help stabilise
some of these countries and discourage this kind of mass migration from
them.
"Well-focused aid should be used to help stabilise these countries, to prevent conflict breaking out."
Analysis: Alan Soady, BBC political and parliamentary reporter
Michael Fallon is arguing that defence and international development are "two sides of the same coin".
He
mentions not only the migrant crisis in the Mediterranean, but also the
200 military personnel still in areas of Sierra Leone affected by the
ebola virus.
His department, however, is facing further budget savings of £500m on top of cuts that have been made in recent years.
The
government has been coming under pressure for months over whether it
will continue to meet the Nato target of spending at 2% of GDP on
defence.
In contrast, the international development budget is protected from cuts.
And
so, whatever the rights or wrongs of Michael Fallon's view of how aid
money should be spent, some in Westminster will suspect the defence
secretary may be hoping it could have the happy coincidence of saving
his own department some cash.
Britain
is sending survey vessel HMS Enterprise to the Mediterranean early next
month to take over from HMS Bulwark, which Mr Fallon said had saved
nearly 3,000 lives.
"Well-focused aid should be used to help stabilise these countries, to prevent conflict breaking out."
Analysis: Alan Soady, BBC political and parliamentary reporter
Michael Fallon is arguing that defence and international development are "two sides of the same coin".
He
mentions not only the migrant crisis in the Mediterranean, but also the
200 military personnel still in areas of Sierra Leone affected by the
ebola virus.
His department, however, is facing further budget savings of £500m on top of cuts that have been made in recent years.
The
government has been coming under pressure for months over whether it
will continue to meet the Nato target of spending at 2% of GDP on
defence.
In contrast, the international development budget is protected from cuts.
And
so, whatever the rights or wrongs of Michael Fallon's view of how aid
money should be spent, some in Westminster will suspect the defence
secretary may be hoping it could have the happy coincidence of saving
his own department some cash.
Britain
is sending survey vessel HMS Enterprise to the Mediterranean early next
month to take over from HMS Bulwark, which Mr Fallon said had saved
nearly 3,000 lives.
A British Merlin helicopter will continue taking part in operations.
GCHQ,
the UK's listening post in Cheltenham, is also reportedly being
deployed for the first time to identify criminal gangs smuggling
migrants to the Libyan coast.
Mr Fallon added: "There has got to
be a much more comprehensive approach tackling the problem much further
back, dealing with the trafficking gangs, building up information about
the people who are making money out of this incredibly dangerous
journey."
Meanwhile, Foreign Secretary Philip Hammond
will join EU counterparts in Luxembourg on Monday to discuss a European
naval operation in the Mediterranean to combat people smuggling.
Earlier
this week, EU ministers failed to agree to a plan that would involve
the equal distribution of asylum seekers across all 28 EU states.
While
some EU members, including Germany and Austria, back the quota idea,
others argue migrants should not be forced to move to countries where
they do not want to settle.
The UK, Denmark and Ireland have exemptions from the quota plan.
Much
of the mass migration has come from Libya where there has been conflict
since 2011, following the ousting and death of former leader Muammar
Gaddafi.
There is currently no ruling power in the country, although the UN is leading attempts to establish a unitary government.
Mr Fallon said it was important a political settlement was reached in
Libya soon so that there was an official government the UK could work
with, enabling migrants to be returned.
"We have to break the
link between rescuing people from the Mediterranean and settlement
because they'll keep coming if they think they're going to be settled."
Asked
whether the EU could consider a naval blockade of the northern coast of
Africa, Mr Fallon said: "That is a matter for Europe to look to see...
It is a very long coast.
"That is a difficult operation. I think
what is more important is to pool the intelligence we have to go much
further back in Africa."
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