Yorkshire Post

1,057 migrants have made it to UK in January alone

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MORE than 1,000 migrants have arrived in the UK so far this year after crossing the Channel.

Home Office figures show more than 300 people made the journey at the weekend, with 112 recorded in two boats on Saturday and 276 on Sunday in five boats. This takes the total for 2024 to date to 1,057.

The highest number to cross in a single day so far this year was 358 in eight boats on January 17.

The crossings come as Prime Minister Rishi Sunak is braced for another battle in Parliament over his bid to revive the Government’s plan to send migrants to Rwanda, which has been stalled by legal challenges.

In the House of Lords, 71 peers are due to speak at the second reading debate of the proposed Safety of Rwanda (Asylum and Immigratio­n) Bill.

Prominent critics include Archbishop of Canterbury Justin Welby, inset, who has voiced profound concerns about the deportatio­n scheme in which asylum seekers who cross the Channel will be put on a one-way flight to the east African country’s capital, Kigali.

The provisiona­l annual total for last year, 29,437, was 36 per cent lower than the record 45,774 crossings for the whole of 2022 but is still the second highest annual total on record, above the figure for 2021 (28,526).

With figures tracking slightly higher so far in 2024 than at the same time last year, Downing Street said there were variations in the number of crossings taking place but it was “too early to say what the trend is for this year” when asked whether the Prime Minister was on track to achieve his pledge to stop the boats.

The Government was “working closely with our French counterpar­ts”, Mr Sunak’s spokesman said.

Earlier this month Home Secretary James Cleverly – who has set himself a target of meeting Mr Sunak’s pledge by the end of this year – insisted the weather was not a contributo­ry factor to last year’s falling number of migrant crossings.

The decrease was instead because of co-operation with Europe, disrupting the supply chain of engines and boats and “going after the money of these people smugglers”, he said, as the Government argued the figures were evidence of the UK’s £480 million agreement with France to beef up efforts to stop migrants making the journey starting to pay off as well as the effectiven­ess of a fast-track returns deal struck with Albania.

But the Immigratio­n Services Union, which represents border staff, said the drop in arrivals was likely to be a “glitch”, with “higher numbers” of Channel crossings expected this year.

A Home Office spokesman said: “Our priority is to stop the boats, which is why we have taken robust action to crack down on vile people smuggling gangs, deter migrants from making dangerous crossings and, alongside our French counterpar­ts, intercept vessels.”

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