World / Refugees And Migrants

UK MPs launch inquiry into rise in Channel migrant crossings

12:20 pm on 8 August 2020

British MPs have launched an inquiry into the rising number of people trying to enter the UK using small cross-Channel boats.

Migrants in an inflatable dinghy are rescued off the coast of France by the French Coastguard in August 2019. Photo: AFP / MARINE NATIONALE

More than 1000 migrants arrived on UK shores in this way in July, while 235 were detained two days ago - the record for a single day.

The Commons home affairs committee will look into the criminal gangs who run crossings, the dangers passengers face and UK and French government actions.

Labour said ministers were "failing to get to grips with the crisis".

The committee will assess the conditions migrants face in France - where they often stay in makeshift camps while they wait for boats - and the particular dangers to children who make the crossing unaccompanied.

In a tweet, Home Secretary Priti Patel said the number of crossings was "unacceptably high".

"I know that when the British people say they want to take back control of our borders - this is exactly what they mean," she added.

She said "genuine refugees" would be able to claim asylum in other "safe" EU countries.

Speaking to Sky News, Chancellor Rishi Sunak did not deny reports the Royal Navy could be used to patrol the English Channel for migrant boats.

"I'm frustrated," he said. "Everyone is, which is why we've been working much more closely with the French government in recent time to improve our co-operation and intelligence-sharing to police crossings."

The number of people making the crossing in July was almost as high as the combined total for May and June, with migrants encouraged by good weather and calm seas.

French and British police monitor the coastline near Calais in northern France to try and prevent migrants crossing the English Channel. [file pic] Photo: AFP

Natalie Elphicke, Conservative MP for Dover, Kent, tweeted that the "unacceptable situation" must be "brought to an end".

Labour's Rosie Duffield, who represents Canterbury, said the numbers represented those "whose terror at making this most treacherous of crossings was still not as horrific a concept as staying in the place where they were".

Labour's shadow home secretary Nick Thomas-Symonds called the crisis "deeply concerning".

The committee, chaired by Labour MP Yvette Cooper, has previously questioned Patel on the issue, but will now conduct a full inquiry.

Cooper said she was concerned about "criminal gangs" who were "making money from putting people in flimsy dinghies".

She said it was "particularly troubling to see children being put at risk" and the committee was taking written evidence in preparation for Parliament's return in September, when it will hear oral evidence.

- BBC