The Independent

Will people smugglers face tougher sentences in UK?

- SEAN O’GRADY

Every time a people trafficker loads a refugee or an economic migrant on to a flimsy dinghy and launches them into the English Channel, they are passing a potential death sentence on those they exploit. Should the people trafficker­s themselves not be subject to a commensura­te sentence of life imprisonme­nt? It is already a serious offence, carrying a jail sentence of 14 years as a maximum.

However, the home secretary, Priti Patel, is not satisfied with how this has worked in practice, pointing to what she says is an average sentence of three years. Natural justice might demand a more punitive sanction.

Patel also has highly attuned political instincts for what her party and its electoral base would wish to see. Immigratio­n is obviously an issue that has climbed up the political agenda during the Brexit process, and the home secretary must be aggrieved to see Nigel Farage and his Reform Party making political capital out of the continuing arrival of migrants at the shores of Dover.

Though the numbers are modest by the standards of recent flows of people into and out of the UK, and

many are in fact perfectly legal under internatio­nal law, they tend to attract much political outrage in some quarters. Patel is also alert to the forthcomin­g reshuffle, and the possibilit­y of her job, one of the traditiona­l “great offices of state” being offered to the likes of Michael Gove. As has been observed during the saga of bullying allegation­s against her, she is tenacious in her defence of her own position.

Politicall­y attractive as a life sentence would be, and arguably appropriat­e for these callous criminals, it is an ambitious policy. If Patel is looking for a mandatory life sentence with a minimum term, that currently only applies in England and Wales to murder. A stronger “whole life” tariff is reserved for the most serious types of multiple murder or terrorism. The whole life tariff is in effect the descendant of the death penalty, originally mandated by parliament when hanging for murder was abolished in 1969. Again, Patel and parliament may feel that people traffickin­g falls into this category, if it, for example, involved a high number of fatalities in the most gruesome of circumstan­ces. As an act of retributio­n, it would certainly attract some popular support.

The main drawback though with a mandatory sentence of great span, “life” or not, is that it might not prove a very effective deterrent. As any driver with an eye out for speed cameras knows, the chances of getting caught have to be weighed against the possible penalty and the benefits of ignoring the law. The people trafficker­s, by their nature, live in the shadows. They are largely out of the reach of the British authoritie­s, either because they are not based in the UK (though their agents and accomplice­s might be), or they are too elusive. Since Brexit, cooperatio­n in arrest warrants and cross-Channel police cooperatio­n is not as smooth as it was, even though the British now pay the French authoritie­s £28m to police their beaches. The European arrest warrant is a thing of the past. The Dublin convention and other restrictio­ns on crossChann­el travel by refugees has also disappeare­d. Patel was an enthusiast­ic Brexiteer.

A life sentence for people trafficker­s is a fine promise for a manifesto or for a party conference speech, and many would sympathise with the idea of a fitting punishment for those who make money from human misery. However, what practical difference it would make is debatable, and it might even make those at the top of these organisati­ons even more ruthless towards the underlings in their gangs if it meant less chance of conviction and spending decades rotting in jail. Deterrence is, at best, only part of the answer to a problem that is bound to grow as the weather improves and the seas grow calmer in the months ahead.

As any driver with an eye out for speed cameras knows, the chances of getting caught have to be weighed against the possible penalty and the benefits of ignoring the law

 ?? (PA) ?? Priti Patel has highly attuned instincts for what her party wishes to see
(PA) Priti Patel has highly attuned instincts for what her party wishes to see

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