UK plans to use navy to prevent Channel migrant crossings

UK plans to use navy to prevent Channel migrant crossings

Britain is facing an “unacceptable” rise in the number of boats carrying migrants across the English Channel and would act to send “illegal” entrants back to France, immigration compliance minister Chris Philp wrote in a newspaper here article published on Saturday.

“PEOPLE ARE RIGHT TO BE FRUSTRATED OVER MIGRANT CROSSINGS”

Philp said he was going to Paris next week to raise concerns over the issue. The UK would urge France to stop migrants from getting into boats and would also “return those who make it to our shores,” Philp wrote in the Telegraph. “The French must ensure that migrants who are caught attempting to reach the UK by boat cannot do so again,” Philp wrote.

A rise in the number of migrants attempting to cross the English Channel has led to ministers demanding tougher actions from the French government.

France has said calm weather conditions were making the illegal crossings easier. Surveillance teams deployed along its northern coast were intercepting migrants daily and extra resources had been mobilised, an interior ministry spokesman said.

The London-based Times newspaper reported that UK ministers were considering blocking migrant boats in the English Channel before they enter UK waters, a tactic used by Australia against migrants.

France says five times as many migrant boats were caught between January and July compared with the same period in 2019. The English Channel is just 23 miles wide at its narrowest point between Dover and Calais.

“This is a joint problem … which needs a joint operational response,” the French interior ministry spokesman said. Most migrants originate from countries such as Yemen, Egypt, Sudan and Iraq in search of better jobs and living conditions.

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