The National - News

Gangs use social media to smuggle people into UK

- JACK DUTTON London

Facebook, Instagram, Twitter and other social media networks are disregardi­ng requests by the UK’s National Crime Agency to take down pages used by human trafficker­s, including those promoting illegal boat trips across the English Channel.

Gangs publicise smuggling routes and advertise false or stolen documents on social networking sites, said Rob Jones, an NCA director.

Between January and May, the agency flagged more than 1,200 pages it said should be taken d own.

Of those, 578 were closed but 485 requests were rejected for not breaching conditions, Mr Jones said.

“The main reasons provided by social media companies for pages not being removed include that the page does not contravene their policies or that the page or post does not meet the required threshold to constitute a breach of policy,” Mr Jones told MPs.

“On occasion, individual posts will be removed but pages kept open.”

On Tuesday, the UK authoritie­s tracked six boats carrying 159 people trying to cross the English Channel.

Clandestin­e Channel Threat Commander Dan O’Mahoney said the smugglers behind the crossings were breaking the law and that the UK authoritie­s were relentless­ly going after those responsibl­e.

That day, seven suspected members of a people-smuggling ring helping migrants to enter the UK illegally from France were arrested.

So far this year, 7,915 people made the perilous journey across the world’s busiest shipping strait in more than 600 boats. In 2018, fewer than 500 people were detected entering Britain in small boats.

The numbers arriving by sea have been rising, partly because of the drop in lorry traffic travelling into the UK because of the coronaviru­s pandemic.

Smugglers are flourishin­g as social media sites offer a “really good, dynamic, agile way for people to move migrants between them, and for groups to communicat­e”, Mr Jones said.

Although people smuggling is not as lucrative as drugs or weapons traffickin­g, an inflatable dinghy with an engine could be bought for less than £5,000 ($6,640) and, if packed, can mean a good margin for gangs.

Alp Mehmet, chairman of the campaign group Migration Watch UK, said there is simply no excuse for social media companies to not co-operate with the NCA.

Facebook justifies sharing how to escape a country illegally – albeit not through human traffickin­g – by saying it could help to save peoples’ lives.

Between January and May, the UK flagged 1,200 pages it said should be taken down

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