British paratroopers dropping in French field for
D-day event asked for passports
French officials insist on checking paperwork of 400
troops landing in Normandy for 80th anniversary commemoration
Dan Sabbagh
Defence and security correspondent
Thu 6 Jun
2024 18.57 CEST
Eyebrows
were raised at the Ministry of Defence when French immigration and customs
insisted on checking the paperwork of 400 British paratroopers immediately
after they dropped into fields near Saneville, Normandy on Wednesday.
Some felt
the French were trying to make a point in response to the UK’s decision to
leave the EU and, while immigration checks for British troops on exercise
abroad are routine, doing so at a public commemoration is deemed exceptional.
US and
Belgian troops involved in the drop were not checked, part of an international
commemoration of one of the earliest operations of D-day. The US forces flew
from France and had already completed their border formalities; no check was
required for the Belgians as EU citizens.
Passport
checks were required between Britain and France before Brexit, but since the UK
left the EU officials stamp passports on entry to the 27-country bloc.
Though the
drop and the event happened 24 hours ago, film of the French officials greeting
the British soldiers was picked up online on Thursday. Brig Mark Berry, the
commander of 16 Air Assault Brigade, told the Sun: “It is something we haven’t
experienced before.”
French
immigration officials said checking papers in the field was exceptional given
the significance of the event, part of the celebrations of the 80th anniversary
of the invasion of Normandy on D-day in 1944. Jonathan Monti, an immigration
official, said: “We are welcoming the UK soldiers.”
Film showed
the checks were brief, while crowds of spectators cheered and praised those
undertaking the airdrop.
Eighty
years ago, more than 18,000 men of the US 82nd and 101st Airborne Divisions and
the British 6th Airborne Division were dropped into Normandy shortly after
midnight to secure critical points and areas behind the five invasion beaches.
It was a risky exercise and many soldiers were killed on landing, having come
down unsafely or into enemy gunfire – as at the village of Sainte-Mère-Église.
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