Los Angeles Times

Five die in English Channel trying to reach Britain

The dead include a 7-year-old girl. Hours earlier, Parliament OKd sending illegal crossers to Rwanda.

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LONDON — Five more people died in the English Channel on Tuesday, underscori­ng the risks of crossing one of the world’s busiest sea lanes in overloaded inflatable boats, just hours after British lawmakers approved a controvers­ial bill to stop the traffic.

The migrants, including a 7-year-old girl, died when their boat got stuck on a sandbank off the coast of Pas-de-Calais in northern France. The French navy rescued 49 people, but 58 others refused to disembark and continued on toward Britain, local authoritie­s said in a statement.

The vessel was just one of several small boats packed with people that took off from the French coast early Tuesday, as calm weather enticed them to attempt the crossing. The overcrowde­d boats are being monitored by drones, French maritime authoritie­s said.

Just a few hours earlier, the U.K. Parliament approved legislatio­n allowing the government to deport to Rwanda those who enter the country illegally. While Prime Minister Rishi Sunak says the plan will deter people from risking their lives on the channel, human rights groups have criticized it as illegal and inhumane.

“If you look at what’s happening, criminal gangs are exploiting vulnerable people; they are packing more and more people into these unseaworth­y dinghies,” Sunak told reporters on a trip to Poland. “That’s why, for matters of compassion more than anything else, we must actually break this business model and end the unfairness of people coming to our country illegally.”

The number of migrants crossing the channel in small boats has soared in recent years as people fleeing war, the effects of climate change and economic uncertaint­y seek a better life in Britain. They pay smugglers thousands of dollars for the crossing, hoping to reunite with relatives or find work in a country where immigratio­n enforcemen­t is seen as weak and where migrants from all over the world can easily melt into society.

Human rights organizati­ons say the way to stop the traffickin­g is for countries to work together to provide safe and legal routes for migrants, not for countries like Britain to put up barriers and outsource their problem to others.

But even allies Britain and France have struggled to sufficient­ly coordinate efforts to reduce the number of those crossing the channel in small boats. The U.K. has struck a series of deals with France to increase patrols of beaches and share intelligen­ce to disrupt smugglers — all of which have had only a limited effect.

Britain’s effort to send some asylum seekers to Rwanda was swiftly condemned by the United Nations’ refugee agency and the Council of Europe, which called on the U.K. to rethink its plans.

“The new legislatio­n marks a further step away from the U.K.’s long tradition of providing refuge to those in need, in breach of the Refugee Convention,” U.N. High Commission­er for Refugees Filippo Grandi said in a statement. “Protecting refugees requires all countries — not just those neighborin­g crisis zones — to uphold their obligation­s.”

Small boat crossings are a potent political issue in Britain, where they are seen as evidence of the government’s failure to control immigratio­n.

Sunak has made his plan to “stop the boats” a key campaign promise as his Conservati­ve Party has trailed badly in opinion polls ahead of a general election this year.

The number of migrants arriving in Britain on small boats soared to 45,774 in 2022 from 299 four years earlier. The figure dropped to 29,437 last year as the government cracked down on people smugglers and reached an agreement to return Albanians to their home country.

Former Prime Minister Boris Johnson first proposed the Rwanda plan more than two years ago, when he reached an agreement with the East African nation to accept some asylum seekers in return for millions of dollars in aid. Implementa­tion has been held up by a series of court challenges and opposition from migrant advocates who say it violates internatio­nal law.

The deportees will be eligible to apply for asylum in Rwanda, but they won’t be allowed to return to Britain.

The legislatio­n approved Tuesday, known as the Safety of Rwanda Bill, is a response to a Supreme Court decision that blocked deportatio­n flights because the government couldn’t guarantee the safety of migrants sent to Rwanda. After signing a treaty with Rwanda to beef up protection­s for them, the government proposed the new legislatio­n declaring Rwanda to be a safe country.

 ?? Gareth Fuller Press Assn. ?? PEOPLE thought to be migrants are brought to Dover, England. Overloaded small boats had left France.
Gareth Fuller Press Assn. PEOPLE thought to be migrants are brought to Dover, England. Overloaded small boats had left France.

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