The Daily Telegraph

Stop every migrant Channel crossing, Patel to tell French

- By Charles Hymas

PRITI PATEL is expected to urge her French counterpar­t to speed up plans to intercept every migrant before they reach the UK in a crisis meeting this week.

The Home Secretary will meet Gerald Darmanin, French interior minister, to find a “shared solution” to the Channel crisis which last week saw a record 1,185 migrants reach the UK in a day, said sources.

Dan O’mahoney, the clandestin­e Channel threat commander, said the smugglers’ business model would only be “broken” when the French achieved their promised intercepti­on rate of 100 per cent of migrants.

“We look forward to working with the French to understand how they’re going to do that,” he said. “We’re nowhere near 100 per cent and we need to work much harder. We need to continue to work with the French by sharing technology, intelligen­ce and getting the boots on the ground in the right place. But the numbers speak for themselves. We’re falling well short of 100 per cent at the moment.”

On Thursday, the French intercepte­d just 99 migrants, fewer than one in 10 of the 1,284 who attempted to cross the Channel in small boats. French authoritie­s blamed over-stretch due to a public holiday and extra security required for an official United States visit.

The UK released the first instalment of the £54 million funds for extra police patrols and surveillan­ce after Mr Darmanin pledged to deliver a 100 per cent intercepti­on rate once all the money had been paid.

In a statement to The Telegraph at the weekend, the Home Secretary said last week showed “we must do more”. “I want to go further and faster and that’s why I will be holding talks with Monsieur Darmanin this week,” she added.

“There is no single solution to this

global crisis, but I am clear that through our ‘new plan for immigratio­n’ and our partnershi­p with the French, we will together break this business model and stop vulnerable people putting themselves in the hands of vile criminals, and their lives at risk.”

It follows one of the worst weeks for crossings, with 2,449 migrants reaching the UK last week, taking the number this year to more than 23,500, almost three times as many as last year’s total of 8,417, itself a record.

The crisis has fuelled tensions between Tory MPS over the direction of the Government especially from Red Wall MPS who helped Boris Johnson secure his majority of 80 seats in the 2019 election.

One senior Red Wall MP said the migrant crisis cut through more than almost any other issue, whether sleaze, climate change or national insurance rises. “It is all about taking back control of our own borders,” he said.

“I would say there is a lull in hostilitie­s between Tory backbenche­rs and the Government over the migrant crisis. If the new immigratio­n bill doesn’t work six months after it has gone through, then all hell will break loose.”

Alexander Stafford, Rother Valley Tory MP, said: “Apart from Covid, dealing with the migrant crisis is the number one priority for my constituen­ts. The Government must put relentless focus on sorting out the mess going on in the Channel.”

Tom Tugendhat, chair of the Commons foreign affairs committee, said Britain should build partnershi­ps with other countries rather than “indulge in an internatio­nal blame-game” to stop Channel crossings. He said the UK’S politician­s and border police “need to fight much harder” and identify and prosecute people trafficker­s.

It was reported yesterday that Paul Lincoln, the outgoing head of the UK Border Force, had told staff in a leaving speech that “bloody borders” were “just such a pain in the bloody a---”.

Sources said it was a “small part of a wider speech”. It also emerged the PCS union for Border Force guards is considerin­g applying for a judicial review to prevent the Home Office deploying the controvers­ial tactic of turning back migrant boats at sea.

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