News Nearly 120 migrants cross Channel today as authorities carry out rescues in French waters

Mark White

Guest Reporter
Almost 120 migrants have crossed the English Channel so far on Wednesday, as dozens more were rescued when their small boats got into difficulties in French waters.

Two small boat loads arrived illegally in British waters this morning, with another two still in French waters and making steady progress towards the UK.



Today’s arrivals are the first for more than a week, since almost 2,300 small boat migrants crossed in the space of just 10 days.

French authorities responded to several incidents overnight as people smugglers took advantage of a break in the bad weather to launch multiple small boats.


Migrant arrivals



In one incident near Boulogne, a migrant was taken ashore suffering a cardiac arrest.

15 others on the overcrowded vessel were also taken to awaiting emergency services in Boulogne.

French authorities have not yet confirmed the condition of the migrant in cardiac arrest.

They are examining whether the victim was crushed into unconsciousness and cardiac arrest on a vastly overcrowded boat.

Most migrant boats routinely carry around 60 migrants.

But increasing numbers of small boats are putting to sea with numbers as high as 100 onboard.

One maritime security source said the problem stems mainly from African migrants, who either do not want to pay people smuggling gangs, or do not have the money to pay them.

He told GB News: “For more than a year now, we’ve seen increasingly brazen groups ofmainly African migrants, rushing the boats as they’re being launched from French beaches.

LATEST DEVELOPMENTS:


Migrant arrivals



“They’ve not paid for their journey, but just force their way on through brute force.

“It can be a pretty violent process, we’ve seen stabbings and broken bones on a regular basis.

“These boats are already crammed with around 60 people on board. But add to that another 30 or 40 scrambling onboard, it’s easy to see why we’re seeing so many incidents of people either falling overboard or being crushed to death.”

Today, the Border Vessel Typhoon arrived into Dover Harbour just after 9am with the first group of 65 migrants on board.

That was followed by the Border Force vessel Ranger two hours later, with 53 mainly young men taken to the nearby migrant processing centre.

Today’s arrivals so far have taken the total number who have crossed from France since the beginning of the year to almost 4,500.

That total has plunged the Labour government's border security policy into deeper crisis, as the numbers crossing the Channel continue to hit record levels, despite the Prime Minister’s promise to smash the gangs.


Migrant arrivals



There are growing calls on the government to introduce a deterrent scheme, similar to the previous government's Rwanda policy.

The Rwanda scheme was scrapped by Sir Keir Starmer on his first day in office.

The Prime Minister branded it “a gimmick” and instead announced the introduction of a new Border Security Command.

The new command has been given millions of pounds of extra funding, diverted from the Rwanda scheme.

However, eight months on, the number of migrants crossing the Channel appears on course to overtake the more than 36,800 who crossed last year.

A Home Office spokesperson said: “We all want to end dangerous small boat crossings, which threaten lives and undermine our border security.

“The people-smuggling gangs do not care if the vulnerable people they exploit live or die, as long as they pay. We will stop at nothing to dismantle their business models and bring them to justice.”

Find Out More...
 
Top Bottom