The Independent

Tory MPs claim migrants in dinghies are ‘invading’ UK

- ROB MERRICK DEPUTY POLITICAL EDITOR

A group of Conservati­ve MPs says migrants crossing the English Channel are “invading” the country, with one claiming they can simply “paddle in”.

A former child refugee condemned the “common sense group” of Tory backbenche­rs for lacking “humanity and decency”, after it urged Priti Patel to get tougher – including by sending in royal navy warships.

A letter sent by a 25-strong group of MPs and peers reads: “It is strikingly clear that, rather than a ‘hostile environmen­t’, invading migrants have been welcomed.”

The group also claims those arriving are being put up in “expensive hotels” and enjoying “immediate access” to financial help – although cash support for an asylum seeker is just £37.75 per week.

Gulwali Passarlay, who wrote an acclaimed book about escaping Afghanista­n when he was a 12-year-old boy, said: “They have to look at themselves and have humanity and have decency.”

On the refugees crossing in fragile dinghies, he said: “These are people who are desperate, who have seen violence in countries, they are fleeing from places like Afghanista­n, Syria and Iraq.”

And Lisa Doyle, the director of advocacy at the Refugee Council, said: “We need our MPs and peers to do better than this. It’s time to drop the soundbites and the scapegoati­ng, and implement reasonable policies, in line with internatio­nal law, that enable people seeking asylum to access safe and regular routes to the UK.”

But John Hayes, a Conservati­ve MP and the group’s chair, defended the provocativ­e language in the letter, telling The Independen­t: “People do feel it is an invasion. We are reflecting the sentiment of a very large number of people who feel this is the entry into our country of a large number of people illegally. From the perspectiv­e of legal migrants, it’s terribly insulting to have other people who can just walk in – or, in this case, paddle in.”

The letter was sent as Chris Philp, the immigratio­n minister, met with French officials – but not a government minister – in Paris, promising a “new, comprehens­ive action plan”, but with no detail provided.

His boss, the home secretary, has appointed a former royal marine as her “clandestin­e channel threat commander”, to draw up plans to block migrants coming over from France. But the Ministry of Defence is still considerin­g her request to deploy warships, after one official there branded the tactic “completely potty”.

Mr Hayes said his group backed the move, saying: “We think it’s an excellent idea, we should deal with that without delay.”

He argued the numbers crossing from France, had reached “really extraordin­ary numbers”, but the figures suggest there has simply been a shift in method.

The most common route has been to stow away in a lorry but, since the coronaviru­s lockdown, the number of unaccompan­ied asylum-seeking children found in lorries at Dover port has reduced from several dozen a month to zero.

It emerged on Monday that Ms Patel was part of a Commons committee inquiry which warned that “a policy that focuses exclusivel­y on closing borders will drive migrants to take more dangerous routes”.

Mr Passarlay, speaking to BBC News, added: “I would like more humanity and compassion from these MPs. It’s so unfortunat­e that you treat people like that like statistica­l numbers.”

 ?? (Getty) ?? Four men, using shovels as paddles, cross the Channel
(Getty) Four men, using shovels as paddles, cross the Channel

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