The Mail on Sunday

Home Office gets tough with Facebook blitz to deter Channel migrants

New measures will make it harder for you to reach and remain in the UK.

- By Glen Owen POLITICAL EDITOR

ONE picture shows a perilously over-manned dinghy heading for the distinctiv­e Dover coast – the other, a solitary migrant staring forlornly through metal mesh.

The aim of Priti Patel’s new advertisin­g campaign, to be launched on Friday, is to do as much as possible to counter the insinuatio­ns of the criminal gangs traffickin­g people to the Channel that the journey across the

Straits of Dover is safe and will lead to a new life of security and prosperity in Britain.

The adverts – which will be directed at migrants in Northern France and Belgium on Facebook and Instagram in their own languages – can be summed up as: ‘It’s extremely dangerous to try to get here, and if you make it you could be sent to Rwanda anyway.’

The campaign has been timed to coincide with the peak summer months for small boat crossings.

A Whitehall source said: ‘The ads will address the false promises of a 100 per cent safe journey or a private boat when, in reality, migrants are forced on to overcrowde­d dinghies held together with tape, and given highly absorbent lifejacket­s, if any. The campaign will include informatio­n on possible relocation to Rwanda or another safe country, the dangers of Channel crossings, the realities of illegal arrival in the UK and informatio­n on safe alternativ­es.

‘It is essential for people to have accurate informatio­n when considerin­g life-threatenin­g and illegal attempts to cross the Channel.’

The source added that the UK’s partnershi­p with Rwanda ‘will help break the business model of criminal gangs and prevent loss of life’.

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