British home secretary in France for security talks
British home secretary Amber Rudd will meet the French interior minister in Paris to discuss asylum policy
British home secretary Amber Rudd is due to meet her French counterpart in Paris later, amid calls for British border controls in Calais to be reviewed.
Rudd is due to discuss security with French interior minster Bernard Cazeneuve during the scheduled trip.
On Monday, Xavier Bertrand, the president of the region, said Calais migrants should be allowed to lodge UK asylum claims in France.
A Home Office source has dismissed the idea as a "complete non starter".
Under the 2003 Touquet deal between France and the UK, Britain can carry out checks in Calais to stop migrants trying to get to Britain, while French counterparts can do the equivalent in Dover.
On Monday, Bertrand reportedly said he wanted a "new treatment" for asylum seekers trying to get to the UK and said people living in the Calais camp, known as the Jungle, should be able to apply at a "hotspot" in France rather than waiting to reach Britain.
Those who failed would be deported directly to their country of origin.
Current rules known as the Dublin Regulation state that refugees must register in the first European country they arrive in. This country usually takes charge of their asylum claim.