Muscat Daily

UK, France sign deal on migrant crossings

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London, UK - Increased patrols and technology will be deployed along France’s beaches under a new agreement between Paris and London aimed at stopping illegal migration across the Channel.

A growing number of migrants have tried to reach Britain across the perilous and busy shipping lane in recent months, with four deaths recorded in 2019 and seven so far this year.

The deal will see French patrols doubled from December 1, with drones and radar used to detect those attempting to cross, Britain’s Home Secretary Priti Patel said on Saturday.

Welcoming the deal, Patel said it would help the two countries with their ‘shared mission to make channel crossings completely unviable’.

The issue has been a source of tension, with Britain accusing France of not doing enough to stop the crossings.

In September, French authoritie­s said they had intercepte­d more than 1,300 people trying to reach Britain, including a handful who had attempted to swim the 30km across the Channel.

Around 6,200 attempted the crossing between January 1 and the end of August, with inflatable boats, paddleboar­ds, kayaks or even lifejacket­s to keep them afloat.

Northern France has long been a magnet for people seeking to smuggle themselves to Britain in small boats or in one of the thousands of trucks and cars that cross over daily on ferries and trains.

French ships pull 64 migrants

Sixty-four migrants including a pregnant woman and several children were rescued in the English Channel in the past 24 hours as they were seeking to reach Britain aboard rickety vessels, French maritime authoritie­s said on Sunday.

A first group of 45 migrants were spotted on Saturday off of Leffrincko­ucke, near the northern French port of Dunkirk, aboard a small craft ‘in difficulty’, a first statement by the French prefecture in charge of the Channel and North Sea said.

Several ‘appeared to be in a state of hypothermi­a’ after being brought aboard a patrol ship, it said.

First responders and border police took charge of the migrants, who were ‘all safe and sound’ when they were put ashore in Calais in the early evening, it added.

Then early Sunday a French customs patrol boat rescued a second group of 19 migrants some 18km south of Boulognesu­r-Mer. They included at least two children, who also ‘seemed to be in a state of hypothermi­a’, Sunday’s statement said.

They were handed over to police, it added.

Calm weather this weekend prompted fears among French sea rescuers that larger numbers than usual would attempt the crossing to Britain, a source close to emergency services told AFP.

With busy traffic and powerful winds and currents, the Channel crossing can prove extremely dangerous for small boats despite the apparent short distance between Calais and British port Dover.

In late October, four people died and three were reported missing, devastatin­g an Iranian-Kurdish family in the deadliest single incident for migrants attempting to cross the Channel.

Increasing numbers of people have attempted the sea crossing from France to Britain since 2018.

First responders and border police took charge of the migrants, who were ‘all safe and sound’ when they were put ashore in Calais in the early evening

 ?? (AFP) ?? This file photo shows a migrant standing in the back of a truck bound for Britain while traffic stopped upon waiting to board shuttles at the entrance to the Channel Tunnel site, in Calais, northern France, on November 19
(AFP) This file photo shows a migrant standing in the back of a truck bound for Britain while traffic stopped upon waiting to board shuttles at the entrance to the Channel Tunnel site, in Calais, northern France, on November 19
 ?? (AFP) ?? This file photo shows migrants on a boat hidden in waves in agitated waters between Sangatte and Cap Blanc-Nez, in the English Channel
(AFP) This file photo shows migrants on a boat hidden in waves in agitated waters between Sangatte and Cap Blanc-Nez, in the English Channel

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