Western Morning News

Record numbers of migrants cross Channel

- MICHAEL DRUMMOND

MORE than 8,400 migrants crossed the English Channel to the UK in 2020, quadruple the number for 2019.

Men, women and children took on the dangerous journey in everything from dinghies and kayaks to a paddling pool.

While thousands of people successful­ly made it to Britain, the perilous Channel waters tragically claimed several lives.

The Home Office has been accused of “hostile rhetoric” and squanderin­g taxpayer cash in its quest to make the route “unviable”.

Despite another agreement being signed with French authoritie­s in November, it is unclear if crossings will be reduced in 2021.

The PA news agency, which has tracked and analysed migrant crossings all year, can report that at least 8,417 people succeeded in reaching the UK in small boats.

Numbers peaked in September, which saw at least 1,951 crossings - more than the entire total for 2019.

A two-week stretch in August saw crossings every single day, with more than 1,200 people reaching the UK.

Meanwhile, it was on September 2 that 416 migrants travelled to the UK aboard small boats - a single-day record.

In October, a Kurdish-Iranian family including small children died when their migrant boat sank off the coast of France.

Their tragic deaths led to an outcry of grief and fury on both sides of the Channel.

Boats were intercepte­d by Border

Force or landed on UK beaches more than 630 times in 2020 and more than one in every three days saw at least one crossing.

Home Secretary Priti Patel, who had pledged that crossings would be an “infrequent phenomenon” by spring 2020, has sought to level blame at “activist lawyers” and has vowed to overhaul the asylum system.

The Home Office also sought the assistance of the military in its efforts to reduce crossings, with RAF planes and an army drone taking to the skies over the English Channel.

Ms Patel was criticised by Bella Sankey, director of humanitari­an charity Detention Action, who said millions of taxpayer cash had been “squandered on the unicorn of ‘unviabilit­y”’.

She told PA: “The Home Secretary’s record on asylum in 2020 is one of failure and denial.

“Her proposals for 2021 would breach the Refugee Convention and will see millions more wasted in unnecessar­y litigation as she tries to defend the indefensib­le. If Priti Patel would only agree to meet those with an understand­ing of these issues, rather than using her platform to attack them, she could reduce the chaos and start to deliver competent and compassion­ate policy-making instead.”

Stephen Hale, CEO at Refugee Action, said: “No-one wants to see people making these dangerous crossings but the Government’s hostile rhetoric has done nothing to help.

“It must stop trying to look tough and urgently create safe and legal routes for people to seek sanctuary.”

 ?? Adam Pretty ?? Artti Aigro of Estonia soars through the air during the practice round for the Four Hills ski jump tournament in Innsbruck, Austria
Adam Pretty Artti Aigro of Estonia soars through the air during the practice round for the Four Hills ski jump tournament in Innsbruck, Austria

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