Boris Johnson indicates India trade deal will mean accepting more migration to the UK

Boris Johnson indicates India trade deal will mean accepting more migration to the UK
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Jamie  Micklethwaite

By Jamie Micklethwaite


Published: 20/04/2022

- 22:17

Updated: 14/02/2023

- 11:44

Mr Johnson hopes to have a free trade agreement with India struck by the end of the year

Boris Johnson has indicated that a post-Brexit trade deal with India will include accepting Delhiā€™s demands for an increase in migration to the UK.

The Prime Minister said he was hopeful that a free trade agreement (FTA) can be struck by the end of the year, as he headed to India for talks with his counterpart Narendra Modi.


Mr Johnson vowed to press for a reduction of fossil fuels from Vladimir Putinā€™s Russia, amid concerns Mr Modi has not been critical enough of the invasion of Ukraine.

The two-day trip was coming amid the fallout from Mr Johnson being fined for breaching coronavirus laws with a gathering for his 56th birthday in 2020.

Prime Minister Boris Johnson boards a plane at Stansted Airport as he departs for a visit to India. Picture date: Wednesday April 20, 2022.
Boris Johnson heading to India
Stefan Rousseau

While he is out of the country, MPs will vote on Thursday on whether to open a Commons investigation into whether he lied to Parliament.

Downing Street had not expressed confidence that a trade deal with India would be brokered this year, saying ā€œwe donā€™t want to sacrifice quality for speedā€.

But, in an interview with journalists flying with him to Gujarat, Mr Johnson said: ā€œWeā€™re aiming to get an FTA by the end of the year.

ā€œOn immigration Iā€™ve always been in favour of talented people coming to this country. We have a massive shortage in the UK, not least in IT, in programmers, weā€™re short to the tune of hundreds of thousands in our economy.

Prime Minister Boris Johnson boards a plane at Stansted Airport as he departs for a visit to India
Prime Minister Boris Johnson boards a plane at Stansted Airport as he departs for a visit to India
Stefan Rousseau

ā€œWe need to have a progressive approach, and we will. But itā€™s got to be controlled.ā€

The Prime Ministerā€™s official spokesman said the deal needs to be ā€œfairā€ and ā€œreciprocalā€ while being consistent with the points-based immigration system launched after departure from the EU.

Mr Johnson vowed to bring up human rights concerns with Mr Modi, who is accused of damaging Indiaā€™s democracy and of whipping up anti-Muslim sentiment.

ā€œI will of course bring up all the issues between us in the way that friends and partners do,ā€ Mr Johnson said.

He also said he would raise concerns that India is becoming increasingly reliant on Moscowā€™s fuel.

ā€œI will make the argument that everybody needs to move away from dependence on Putinā€™s hydrocarbons,ā€ Mr Johnson said.

Mr Johnson was determined to push on with the trip despite the Commons vote and slowly increasing calls from his own Tory MPs for his resignation.

His plans to visit have twice been cancelled, first over the UKā€™s winter wave of Covid infections and then in April last year in response to a new variant hitting India.

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