Record numbers of migrants attempted to cross the Channel in 2021

(London) The perilous crossings of the Channel by migrants dreaming of England reached a record number in 2021, to more than 28,000 people, a phenomenon in full explosion which poisons the relations between London and Paris.



Martine PAUWELS
France Media Agency

At least 28,395 migrants have reached the English coasts aboard small boats, more than triple the previous year (more than 8,400), said the British news agency PA on the basis of figures obtained from the British ministry for l ‘Interior.

The phenomenon has developed strongly since 2018 in the face of the closure of the port of Calais (northern France) and Eurotunnel, which migrants used while hiding in vehicles.

In the month of November 2021 alone, nearly 6,900 people made the crossing despite the danger linked to the density of traffic, strong currents and low water temperature, including a record 1,185 people in a single day, the 11th of the month.

Some migrants paid for it with their lives, like at the end of November, when the sinking of a precarious boat – the deadliest in this busy seaway – left 27 dead, sparking a great wave of emotion in the public.

The illegal Channel crossings have become a real political headache for British Prime Minister Boris Johnson and his Home Secretary Priti Patel, as the Conservative leader has made the fight against immigration his hobbyhorse, in the wake of Brexit.

“Impassable”

These crossings are also a subject of regular tension between Paris and London, the British authorities considering insufficient, despite the payment of financial aid, the efforts undertaken on the French side to prevent migrants from boarding.

The French, who refute these accusations, retort that London is reluctant to actually untie the purse strings.

The climate between the two capitals was further tense after the murderous shipwreck in November, Paris seeing a very negative view of Boris Johnson’s proposal asking the French to take back migrants who crossed the Channel illegally.

According to the newspaper The Times On Monday, the British have little hope of reaching a deal with France before the French presidential election in April.

In the meantime, the British government wants to make these crossings “impracticable”, for which smugglers increasingly resort to larger capacity boats, of several dozen people.

A controversial bill, which promises tougher measures against smugglers, but also against illegally arrived migrants, is currently being examined in Parliament.

If it is adopted, asylum seekers who have arrived illegally in the country will be returned to the “safe countries” through which they have previously passed.

Human rights associations are outraged against a text deemed cruel. But for the government, it will create “a fair but firm immigration system”, “will protect the most vulnerable and crack down on illegal immigration and the criminal gangs that facilitate it”.

“People will continue to cross the Channel in precarious boats, and traffickers will continue to rake in profits, unless ministers open more roads for refugees to seek asylum here,” he commented. Tim Naor Hilton, director of the Refugee Action association.


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