Five migrants die trying to cross the English Channel in a boat
Five migrants attempting to cross the Channel lost their lives in French waters, as confirmed by a French maritime official speaking to the BBC.
Approximately 70 individuals were involved in an attempt to board a small boat on a Wimereux beach when it capsized in the early hours of Sunday.
In a subsequent overnight rescue operation south of Calais, numerous people were rescued from the water.
Foreign Secretary David Cameron expressed his sorrow over the incident, describing it as “heartbreaking.”
Following the rescue efforts, one individual is in critical condition after being transported to a nearby hospital in Boulogne-sur-Mer, while another sustained non-life-threatening injuries. Thirty-two people emerged unscathed.
The Boulogne-sur-Mer public prosecutor’s office has initiated an investigation into “aggravated manslaughter.” Jacques Billant, the prefect of the Pas-de-Calais region, highlighted the peril posed by criminal networks to migrants, emphasizing the life-threatening nature of venturing into 7°C water, with survival limited to just 10 minutes in the event of a capsizing.
Billant mentioned that post-mortem examinations would ascertain the cause of death, potentially attributing it to “drowning” or “thermal shock.”
The distress occurred shortly after the boat set off from the French coast toward England at approximately 02:00 local time (01:00 GMT) on Sunday.
Dozens were trying to board the vessel as it left the beach and found themselves in difficulty at sea, the French maritime prefecture said.
A tugboat patrolling the coast attended the scene and found the bodies.
Around 50 firefighters and several police vehicles were deployed to help with several boats and a French Navy helicopter also helping, according to the regional newspaper La Voix du Nord.
Survivors were taken to a local community center.
The UK Coastguard had no involvement as the incident occurred in French waters very close to the beach near Wimereux.
Enver Solomon, chief executive of the Refugee Council, said the Channel deaths “must be a wake-up call to take decisive action” – including the provision of safe routes for those fleeing war-torn countries.
The deaths came several days after the first small boat crossing of the year was recorded.
It follows a nearly four-week period up to 12 January when no Channel crossings were recorded, which the Home Office says was due to poor weather conditions.
In the same period 12 months earlier, 503 migrants were detected in the Channel.
The provisional total for 2023 – 29,437 crossings – is down on the 45,774 recorded for 2022, which is the highest number since figures began to be collected in 2018.
Speaking to the BBC’s Laura Kuenssberg on Sunday, Lord Cameron said it was “heartbreaking” to hear more lives had been lost in Channel waters.
He said the British government had done “a huge amount” to support French authorities with policing and intelligence operations.
And he insisted that passing the UK government’s Rwanda bill – which aims to send some asylum seekers to the African country – was “essential” to save lives and stop people crossing the Channel on small boats.
The bill is designed to discourage migrants from trying to cross the Channel in small boats.
Tory MPs are piling pressure on Prime Minister Rishi Sunak over the bill, which Mr Sunak is trying to revive after the Supreme Court ruled the earlier scheme was unlawful.
Speaking on the same program, Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer said the incident was a “tragic loss of life” and added: “I absolutely agree we need to stop these Channel crossings”.
But the Labour leader rejected the “gimmick” of the Rwanda scheme, saying the UK should “go after the criminal gangs that are running this vile trade [of boat crossings]”.
Separately, a French report earlier this month stated that the UK was not passing on enough information about small boats crossing the Channel.
According to the Court of Accounts, which audits spending in France, intelligence provided to French police was often “first level” and “very general”.
1 comment
That is why we should seek for peace before any war start .Because the effect of war use to be destructive