The Daily Telegraph - Saturday

Send small boats from Channel migrants to Ukraine, MPs urge

- By Gordon Rayner and Charles Moore

MINISTERS are under pressure from MPs to allow small boats seized from people-smuggling gangs to be given to Ukraine, where they are desperatel­y needed in its war against Russia.

The Home Office has rebuffed pleas to release the stockpile of boats used by cross-Channel migrants to be given as gifts or sold to Ukraine, a decision that campaigner­s say “makes no sense”.

This week, The Telegraph visited a pound near Dover where more than 60 small boats and at least 130 engines were visible, some of which appeared new.

Mission Ukraine UK, a non-profit organisati­on, has asked the Home Office to allow it to put the boats to use by taking them to the battle front, where they are needed to ferry personnel and supplies across the Dnipro river. Dmytro Tomkin, its co-founder, said he was “puzzled” by the Government’s refusal to donate the boats and engines.

He said: “We have been buying second-hand boats in the UK and taking them to Ukraine, where they are repaired and put to use.”

Mr Tomkin, who is from Ukraine but lives in the UK where he works in finance, added: “They have said they are unseaworth­y but we have people who repair the boats and engines.”.

Mission Ukraine previously reached an agreement with Sadiq Khan, the Mayor of London, to send vehicles that do not meet the ultra-low emission zone standards in the capital to Ukraine.

Among the MPs who have written to the Home Office to ask why the boats cannot be sent to Ukraine are Bob Seely of the Ukraine all party parliament­ary group, Sir Jacob Rees Mogg, Penny Mordaunt, Greg Clark and Rebecca Evans.

A Government spokesman said the Kyiv government had not requested the boats and “we cannot donate unsafe and dangerous small boats which will put more lives at risk”.

On a bonny day this week, we climbed the hill which looks down on the port of Dover. The sunlit coast of France was clearly visible, just the sort of weather beloved of illegal immigrants crossing from France. Indeed, 534 of them – a record – crossed in similar conditions last Sunday.

But as we walked, we were mostly looking in the opposite direction, working up through mud, brambles, trees and wild garlic to a double fence, its outer row formed of high metal spikes, its inner row of wire. In between the two, security cameras peered at us.

Behind this perimeter, we knew, lay the enormous premises of GXO Logistics, a company which, its website says, “engineers faster, smarter, leaner supply chains”. What interested us, however, was a supply chain which, thanks to the Government, is not faster, smarter or leaner, but is simply not allowed.

Some kind readers may remember that, in this space three months ago, I told the story of Ukraine’s intrepid efforts to take the fight across the Dnipro river, an area of Ukraine which Vladimir Putin’s armies currently occupy.

Since last year, Ukrainian forces have maintained three bridgehead­s there. They have been able to do this only by ferrying men and munitions through the narrow channels of the great river’s delta and tributarie­s. They also bring back the wounded and, sad to say, the dead.

For all this, they need light, small, shallow-bottomed craft, as inconspicu­ous as possible to evade Russian attention. Russian air superiorit­y makes the journeys extremely dangerous. To procure such boats, and the engines which power them, Ukraine needs the world’s help.

In this effort, the British people have been more generous than any other. Organisati­ons such as MissionUkr­aine.uk – with which I travelled in Ukraine last year to hand over a SUV repurposed as a front-line military ambulance – are helped by British donors and volunteers to get such boats cheap, drive them out to Ukraine and there make them river-worthy before delivering them to the military units.

The Ukrainians’ idea, expressed with historical panache, is to turn the “small boats” of the illegal immigrants into the “little ships” of the resistance to Russia. After all, none of the boats arriving in Britain goes back: they are the people-trafficker­s’ one-way taxi service.

The Border Force and the Home Office have no use for them. Why not give them to a friend who desperatel­y needs them?

Rishi Sunak keeps saying that Britain will “do whatever it takes” to ensure Ukrainian victory. Here is something which, from a British point of view, takes very little. All we need to do is hand them over.

Yet the Home Office is curiously cagey, not wanting to say what happens to the small boats or even where they are. Which was why we – our photograph­er, Paul Grover, Dmytro Tomkin from MissionUkr­aine and I – were climbing up above

Dover and why, when we got to the double fence, Paul sent up a drone.

By that means, we found several rows (see page 16), neatly laid out and labelled, of what we were looking for. Through the fences, I counted 20 RIBs, 62 inflatable boats (all deflated and folded) and 131 engines.

This was a big haul, but neverthele­ss a small proportion of what must have accumulate­d after dumping almost 30,000 people on our shores last year and more than 5,000 this year even before the summer migration has started.

The one thing we do know is that the Home Office firmly rejects the “little ships” scheme. Since it was first publicly floated in January, several MPs and many individual­s and organisati­ons have written to the Home Office asking it to release the boats.

Yesterday, the Home Secretary’s spokesman said that the Ukrainian government has not asked for the boats. That is untrue. It did so, via its embassy, in February. Ukraine also offered to take the boats at its own risk.

There was some official muttering at first about how the vessels needed to be kept for evidence in criminal trials. This seems unlikely since the people-trafficker­s, working abroad, are almost never caught. That excuse has died away. The stated reason for rejection has now boiled down to one thing.

Here, from a letter to an MP, is the standard reply from Michael Tomlinson, the minister of state for countering illegal migration: “I am sorry to say that the flimsy rubber inflatable­s used by migrants to attempt crossings of the Channel are

The Government rejection is firm – the minister’s letter shows it is also ignorant and insulting

not seaworthy. In fact, these vessels are lethally dangerous craft which endanger the lives of anyone using them. We have seen at least one fatal incident per month… involving these small boats, and I have seen their unseaworth­iness myself.”

Mr Tomlinson goes on: “The idea that these boats could be repurposed by the Ukrainians to ferry wounded soldiers across the Dnipro, while well intended, simply would not work. These boats are dangerous for fit and healthy people to use, let alone those whose condition would prevent them from reacting when the boats inevitably flounder.”

(I think Mr Tomlinson means “founder”.)

I said above that the Home Office rejection was firm. This letter shows that it is also ignorant and insulting.

Who knows better than the Ukrainians what such boats can and cannot do? Mr Tomlinson tells them that they would not work for ferrying the wounded. He seems unaware that such boats, supplied by others, have been doing exactly that for months. The Ukrainian forces need them because, as I say, there is no alternativ­e.

At any one time, they could use a total of about 900 boats, but they have not mustered nearly that number yet. They know exactly how perilous it is to travel in these small craft. Indeed, after three or four weeks’ service, each boat is scrapped because of damage from bullets and shrapnel.

If Mr Tomlinson would only see a Ukrainian delegation, they might ask him politely how else he would suggest getting the wounded out of the front line.

Besides, they can short-circuit his objections about seaworthin­ess. They

know the boats are not yet fit for the Dnipro (though, by the way, the river crossing is a 20th of the width of the English Channel). The job of organisati­ons like MissionUkr­aine.uk is to repair and adapt the boats and engines for their new purpose.

Naturally, they will reject all boats which cannot be so repurposed. They know what will work for them. Might not their judgment be better than Mr Tomlinson’s?

These ministeria­l letters are so wilfully stupid that I cannot believe they are setting out the full reasons for rejection. The replies feel like bureaucrat­ic pig-headedness about health and safety which cannot possibly apply when fighting the Russians.

We are sadly used to such attitudes, of course, but what is so puzzling is that the Government is failing to look at this issue politicall­y. After many months of pushing, even the mayor of London, Sadiq Khan, belatedly agreed to allow Ulez scrappage cars to be sent to Ukraine. Why are the Tories lagging him?

Here, staring the Government in the face, is a virtually cost-free opportunit­y to assist our beleaguere­d ally and turn to good use the detritus of its failed attempts to stop illegal migration.

The hostility of the Home Office and the total inertia of the Home

Secretary, James Cleverly, are truly bewilderin­g.

 ?? ?? Small boats stored in a pound near Dover included some which appeared to be new
Small boats stored in a pound near Dover included some which appeared to be new
 ?? ?? There is a plan to repurpose Channel small boats into ‘little ships’ for Kyiv, but officialdo­m has got in the way
There is a plan to repurpose Channel small boats into ‘little ships’ for Kyiv, but officialdo­m has got in the way

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