
I saw French cops turn up an HOUR after migrant ‘hop-on service' set sail – deal with Macron is too little too late
Around 50 young East African men wearing life jackets were crammed into the inflatable which set sail near Dunkirk around 5.30am yesterday.
6
6
6
One put two fingers up in a Churchill-esque V for victory as the black vessel returned to shore a few miles down the coast at Gravelines.
The migrant 'taxi boat' bobbed along in near-perfect sea conditions while waiting to pick up any stragglers who had spent the night sleeping in the sand dunes.
But it powered off into the sunrise over the Channel without any new passengers before French search and rescue vessel Ridens escorted them to Border Force.
An hour later, police arrived in a 4x4, with four hapless cops seen with their hands on their heads looking out to sea from the dunes.
One joked around with his baton as colleagues laughed shortly after missing the crossing which made a mockery of the Government's immigration deal with France to crack down on illegals reaching the UK.
The Sun found abandoned life jackets, discarded coats and shoes, punctured PVC dinghies and fuel cans left on the beach where the boat is believed to have left from.
A second group of around 20 migrants simultaneously grounded their vessel in the canal, running inland through Gravelines before they could reach the Channel.
They abandoned ship around 5.30am to evade the authorities but many got stuck in the estuary as they waded through thick waist-high mud.
'Children can get stepped on or squashed'
One was heard yelling 'I'm dying, I'm dying' as cops and firefighters came to their rescue by pulling them to safety with ladders and ropes.
Shocked locals watched as machinery was used to winch the inflatable out of the foul-smelling waters around 1pm.
Starmer & Macron unveil 'aggressive' one in, one out deal to RETURN small boat migrants to France
At least 200 migrants were believed to have arrived in the UK yesterday.
Border Force vessels Hurricane, Ranger and Typhoon were all involved in rescuing people, including women and children.
It came on the final day of President Emmanuel Macron's visit to the UK to thrash out details of a new policy aimed at stopping the boats.
Just 50 migrants a week are expected to be returned during a trial period — with PM Sir Keir Starmer admitting a deterrent is needed after axing the Tories' scheme to relocate asylum seekers to Rwanda.
At least 250 migrants were believed to have arrived in Dover on three boats before Macron and Starmer announced their 'aggressive' policy
It was initially hoped the new agreement would be a 'one in, one out deal' — but 17 migrants will enter Britain illegally for every one returned to France, amounting to just 2,600 booted out each year.
At least 250 migrants were believed to have arrived in Dove r on three boats before Macron and Starmer announced their 'aggressive' policy.
Crossings continue to soar despite Britain giving £771million of taxpayer funding to the French since 2018 and £ 480million in the past three years.
Smugglers have adapted to avoid law enforcement by learning local canal systems and loading boats with people inland instead of on beaches.
They now operate a hop-on service by picking up passengers who lift sluice gates along the winding route before zooming into the Channel.
Boats are almost full by the time they reach open water — leaving powerless cops unable to slash them with knives like they can when on shore.
They are also launching from more secluded and wider beaches which are not used as regularly.
On Wednesday evening, migrants cleared out of their camp in Loon-Plage and caught buses to hotspots ahead of their early hours crossings.
Dozens were prepared to risk their lives in budget orange life jackets bought from superstore Decathlon.
The French sports shop near Dunkirk sells a variety of buoyancy aids for as little as £14.
Migrants were observed queuing among locals to pay for them in full knowledge of why they were being purchased.
Osman, a migrant from Turkey, said: 'The smugglers don't care about our protection so it's on us to try to make sure we don't die.
'Sometimes the smugglers will give us cheap life jackets which are so bad. They act like sponges and soak up water which will only help you sink and drown.'
Sales of kayaks and dinghies which may be used to cross the Channel were previously banned but locals are now allowed to buy them by showing ID cards.
Other small boat passengers desperate for safety have even carried blow-up rubber rings designed for kids playing in the waves.
Armed police are fighting a rise in IRA-style kneecap shootings carried out there by criminal people smugglers using scare tactics to spread fear and threaten rivals
The Sun can reveal greedy people smugglers are dangerously cramming more Channel migrants into small boats than ever before.
An average of 64 people made the journey in each unsuitable dinghy in June — the first time the monthly number has surpassed 60 per boat.
So far this year, each vessel has averaged around 58 people — up 41 per cent from when the figure stood at 41 in 2022.
6
6
Experts fear it will lead to more mass tragedies as evil human traffickers only focus on lining their pockets with bumper profits.
Increasing overcrowding also causes huge problems for Border Force, who can only carry a total of 95 people on board their rescue vessels.
Lucy Moreton, ISU trade union officer representing Border Force staff, warned they may need to ask for help on busy days.
She said: 'We can take maybe one or two loads of people before we need to offload — whereas before it was three or four.
'On busy days this could mean relying on other agencies such as the coastguard or the RNLI.
'Saving lives at sea is what they do, so they would come and assist us — but it causes big problems for them.
'The other thing overcrowding does is put the vulnerable at risk — children can get squashed or stepped on.
'Unstable boats make getting people off them more difficult, and overcrowded boats are more unstable.
'There is always a risk of death, but we do what we can to prevent it.
'I think the smugglers do it because they can get away with it and profit from it.'
'Gun violence is getting worse every day'
Hundreds of migrants live in the Loon-Plage tents which have been gripped by warfare this week as Kurdish, Somalian and Afghan gangs battle for control.
Armed police are fighting a rise in IRA-style kneecap shootings carried out there by criminal people smugglers using scare tactics to spread fear and threaten rivals.
The punishment, involving firing bullets into the middle of the leg to cause extreme pain and even disability, is used to settle scores and territorial gangland feuds.
Some also punish migrants who try to organise their own voyages or board boats without paying — but victims are almost always too scared to ID the gunmen.
Migrants had claimed any return deal between France and the UK would only drive them to make the dangerous 21-mile journey sooner before it is implemented
A senior French cop said: 'The gun violence is getting worse every day.
'We're used to gang fights with knives, but now guns are becoming more and more common.
'We're dealing with extremely dangerous people – ones who think nothing of wounding through the worst non-lethal attacks.'
An Iraqi-Kurdish migrant was rushed to hospital after being shot four times in one leg and once in the other shortly after 3pm on Tuesday.
The 44-year-old was rushed to hospital in Dunkirk where he remained last night in a condition described as 'serious by not life-threatening'.
Another man required a tourniquet after being shot in the knee on Wednesday at the camp used as a 'feeding station' by aid charities handing out food and water.
Dunkirk's judicial police are investigating both incidents, according to the local prosecutor's office.
Gabriel, 17, from war-torn South Sudan, said: 'It's not safe for us here. The people-smuggling Mafia are shooting innocent people in the forest. I will do anything to get out.'
Last month, two Iranians died after being shot while a Sudanese baby was also injured.
Anthony Quenson, a 38-year-old public service worker, hears gunshots reverberate around his house on the doorstep of the Loon-Plage camp.
The Frenchman said: 'Macron is doing nothing about the migrants and it is getting out of control. It feels very dangerous to live here now.
'The authorities here don't do anything to sort this problem out.'
Migrants had claimed any return deal between France and the UK would only drive them to make the dangerous 21-mile journey sooner before it is implemented.
Khalif, a 19-year-old Somalian who had been unsuccessful in crossing five times due to onboard motor issues, paid £1,200 euros to try again yesterday.
He said: 'I'm not worried about Macron trying to make a deal and will keep trying. In France they don't help us but in England they look after us. All I want is a better life than here.'
Somalian refugee Ibrahim, 32, added: 'Politicians may try to stop us but we will go anyway for our safety.
'Macron is the problem. He makes us feel unwelcome as we have nothing here, unlike in England.'
Yesterday's small boats were the first successful crossings since 517 migrants arrived in eight dinghies on Friday.
Another window of opportunity this morning could see hundreds more capitalise on 5mph wind gusts to make the treacherous trip across the Dover Strait.
More than 21,000 migrants have arrived in over 350 boats so far in 2025 which is a record for this point of the year, according to official Government stats.
6
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Sun
2 hours ago
- The Sun
Britain is on the brink of civil unrest, Farage warns as he pledges life in prison for serial sex criminals
BRITAIN teeters on the edge of chaos, Nigel Farage declared today, as he vowed to throw serial offenders behind bars for life. The Reform Party chief warned that "simmering anger and disgust" over the flood of migrants entering the country could ignite a national meltdown. 2 2 Mr Farage pointed to violent clashes outside a small boat hotel in Epping, Essex, as proof that the public's faith in the state to protect them is rapidly crumbling. The fiery protest was triggered by a 38-year-old Ethiopian illegal migrant, who was arrested and later charged with three counts of sexual assault. Mr Farage said: 'On Epping, I don't think anybody in London even understands just how close we are to civil disobedience on a vast scale in this country, and I regret saying that. 'Don't underestimate the simmering anger and disgust there is in this country that we are letting in every week, some days, many hundreds of undocumented young males, many of whom come from cultures in which women and young girls are not even treated as second-class citizens.' Unveiling Reform's £17.4bn crime and policing plan in Westminster, Mr Farage vowed to slash illegal behaviour in half if he triumphs in the next election. He pledged to impose life sentences on anyone convicted of a serious crime three times. Mr Farage also promised to recruit an extra 30,000 police officers within five years of taking office. Doubling down on his hardline stance, the Reform boss revealed plans to ship Britain's 10,000 worst paedophiles and murderers to serve their sentences in countries like El Salvador. He said: 'I haven't spoken to El Salvador yet, but we do know they're quite happy to take American violent offenders, so I don't see any reason why not. 'They want the money, they want the income,' he added. On migrant crime, Mr Farage vowed to deport every foreign criminal and claimed he's already struck a deal with Albania's PM Edi Rama to take back Albanian offenders. Reform MP and ex-magistrate Sarah Pochin lashed out at 'woke policing,' warning Brits have had 'enough.' She fumed: 'We have had enough of our police being in denial about the increasing threat to our own safety from the influx of illegal immigrants. 'Enough of police no longer using stop and search to tackle knife crime, enough of police ignoring mobile phone theft, ignoring the rise of blatant cannabis use on our streets, sympathising with protest groups that simply do not reflect the views of the majority of the British people. 'Police need to police with impartiality.'


Daily Mail
2 hours ago
- Daily Mail
Billionaire tycoon Charles Cohen faces losing mansions, yachts and 25 supercars in embarrassing debt drama
A billionaire New York City real estate tycoon faces losing his fleet of mansions, yachts and supercars after his business defaulted on huge loans. Charles Cohen, 73, has seen authorities in France seize high-value artworks, luxury decor and his prized collection of fine wines, with his assets in the US now under the same threat. Cohen, who boasts a net worth of almost $2 billion, is being sued by Fortress Investment Group over a $535 million loan it made to his property firm, Cohen Realty Enterprises, in 2022. As collateral on the loan, Cohen listed his office tower on Manhattan's Lexington Avenue, the Le Méridien Dania Beach hotel in Fort Lauderdale, Florida, and four other properties, according to court records reported by the Wall Street Journal. But Cohen also personally guaranteed $187.2 million of the loan, which has allowed Fortress to now go after the billionaire's array of luxury assets. Cohen's business defaulted last year, but Fortress said that the value of his collateral did not meet his debts, and court records cited by the Journal showed he is at risk of losing his homes in New York, Connecticut, and Provence, France. Fortress is also reportedly going after his 25 luxury supercars, which includes two Ferraris, and five yachts. Cohen is facing allegations that he transferred ownership of his assets to family members in an attempt to avoid paying his mounting debts, which he denied. Once one of the most powerful real estate moguls in Manhattan, Cohen saw his fortunes sour in the pandemic. Lockdowns sent demand for office spaces through the floor, and Cohen's string of movie theatres that he owns were upended as people could no longer go to see blockbusters in person. Cohen notably won an Oscar in 2017 as his production company, Cohen Media Group, distributed The Salesman, which won best foreign-language film. As many property tycoons gave up their skyscrapers and office buildings to lenders, Cohen kept hold of many as he said he felt personally attached to them as they had been in his family for decades, ever since his father and two uncles started their property empire that Cohen would later take over. This led him to reach a restructuring plan with Fortress that included the personal guarantee of almost $200 million, a decision that has now landed scrutiny on his lavish assets. Cohen has launched a countersuit against Fortress, beginning a battle with the investment group in what the Journal described as 'one of the nastiest in commercial real estate for many years.' Earlier this month, a judge in Italy ruled that one of Cohen's yachts, a 220-foot, $49.6 million vessel, couldn't leave the Port of Loano without approval from the court. The yacht is one of five of Cohen's boats that Fortress is trying to seize, but court records reportedly showed that he transferred ownership to his wife, Clo Jacobs, last year. Jacobs worked as the public relations and marketing director of the American division of luxury designer Jimmy Choo, according to a New York Times report on their wedding in 2004. According to Fortress, he also did the same with his $20 million mansion in Greenwich, Connecticut, and the Château de Chausse estate in France. Late last year, French authorities raided the Château de Chausse, a sprawling 138-acre mansion with a vineyard in France's Provence region. Under orders from a French court, debt collectors seized hundreds of thousands of dollars' worth of Cohen's personal belongings including his prized fine wine collection on behalf of Fortress. After being accused of trying to avoid this fate by transferring ownership to his wife, Cohen denied these claims and said they were legitimate moves for tax-planning purposes. He told the Journal that he is in the process of selling some of his vast array of properties to pay his debts to Fortress, but needs more time to complete the deals. In a deposition in February, he reportedly complained to the court about Fortress' attempts to seize his assets, saying they 'keep pecking at us, like a bird would peck at something... Enough was never enough.' Cohen also listed the Le Méridien Dania Beach hotel in Fort Lauderdale, Florida, (pictured) and four other properties Christopher Caffarone, Cohen's attorney, says that Fortress' aggressive actions have seen the billionaire unable to withdraw money from his personal accounts without approval from Fortress, alongside restrictions to brokerage accounts held by Cohen, his mother and his sister. 'His family's lives are being disrupted,' Caffarone said earlier this year at a court hearing. 'They are getting subpoenaed. They are getting deposed.' Fortress argued that it is going after Cohen's family members because he transferred personal assets to them, and said in court records that it 'is left with no choice but to begin enforcing its judgment against Cohen's assets.' With his vast empire now at risk, Cohen says he is not afraid of losing his reputation as one of the property world's big hitters. 'I've always been good at hanging on,' he told the Journal. 'That's what we've always done, and we will continue to do that.'


Daily Mail
3 hours ago
- Daily Mail
Mother of six-year-old boy who ‘killed a newborn on French maternity ward' had been told twice to keep an eye on her child but he continued to roam unsupervised, victim's family claims
The family of the newborn killed after being allegedly dropped by a six-year-old left to roam a French maternity ward alone have claimed that they had spoken to the child's mother twice telling her to keep an eye on him. Five-day-old Baby Zayneb-Cassandra was found lying unresponsive on the floor beside her crib with a traumatic brain injury at the Jeanne-de-Flandre Children's Hospital in the northern city of Lille, France, on Friday, July 11 and died from her injuries last Tuesday. A boy, whose mother was in the maternity war, was found standing on a chair beside her and is believed to have plucked the tiny baby from her crib and dropped her on the floor. Karima, a cousin of Zayneb's grieving father has claimed that hospital staff were 'warned' of the child's 'abnormal behaviour' and that the baby's grandfather had spoken to the boy's mother two times, urging her to keep an eye on her son. She also alleged that the boy had fixated on Zayneb, calling her 'my doll', and had likely touched her unsupervised a day prior to her fall. 'The day before, Zayneb had already been found without a diaper or electrodes, wet and suffering from hypothermia,' Karima claimed. When the family notified the hospital of this, they claimed that they were told by staff that the baby must have taken her diapers off herself. Baby Zayneb's grieving father Mohamed-Hamza told French press that he will 'fight to identify those responsible' for the tragedy Baby Zayneb, who was born six weeks premature by caesarean to parents Mohamed-Hamza and Sephora, was resuscitated twice before she died last week. Lille's prosecutor's office on Friday confirmed that the infant died from trauma 'consistent with a fall to the floor'. 'A six-year-old child, a member of another family, was indeed seen near the crib and the child on the floor,' prosecutors also confirmed. Zayneb's family are also urging other witnesses to come forward, with Karima explaining that what Zayneb's mother doesn't want 'is for people to think that she left her child unattended,' when she 'entrusted her to the hospital staff'. The boy and the baby were discovered by Delphine, a young woman who had recently given birth herself, who rushed into the room after hearing what she described as a 'loud bang'. Delphine later told Le Parisien that the boy in question had been disruptive for days and was not being supervised as his mother was also recovering from giving birth. 'He was running around everywhere and had already touched a baby in a stroller,' Delphine said. Questions are mounting as to how the boy was able to gain access to Zayneb's crib in the neonatal unit alone, despite being reported as a 'disruptive presence' in the hospital. Karima explained how the boy was running riot in the halls for days after being dropped off at the hospital each morning by his father. 'The father would drop him off in the ward from 7am to 8pm,' she said. Mohamed-Hamza's cousin Karima alleged that the six-year-old boy had fixated on Zayneb, calling her 'my doll', and had likely touched her unsupervised a day prior to her fall Zayneb's grandmother, Fatma, told the Voix du Nord newspaper: 'The boy would arrive at 7am and spend all day running up and down the hallways. 'All the mothers were complaining, and a nurse even warned the child's mother that there was a problem. He was entering the other rooms. 'He also entered Zayneb's room for the first time. He said she looked like a doll, and my husband, who was there, took him out.' 'It seems he tried to grab her by her nappy, and she fell on her head,' Fatma concluded. 'My family is destroyed... My daughter is devastated. Coming home without her baby is inconceivable.' Zayneb's distraught father, Mohamed-Hamza, told Le Parisien he doesn't blame the boy who allegedly caused his daughter's life-ending injuries, but hit out at the hospital for their lack of care. 'Every six-year-old is a little disruptive. I don't blame the mother; she had just given birth... But the child should have been supervised,' the 23-year-old declared. Fatma added that she had to push medical staff to arrange psychological support for her inconsolable daughter-in-law after she was informed her child had died. A criminal investigation into the tragedy was opened this week by the juvenile unit of the Lille Judicial Police Service, in conjunction with local prosecutors. The hospital also announced the opening of 'an internal administrative investigation'. A spokesperson said: 'This human tragedy has deeply affected the staff and teams of Lille University Children's Hospital, as well as the other families present.' A separate statement provided to French press acknowledged 'a particularly serious and upsetting exceptional event, unrelated to care'. 'The thoughts of the University Hospital professionals are first and foremost with the young victim, her family, and her loved ones,' it read. The hospital also added that 'measures to strictly limit visits to the neonatal units of the Lille University Hospital have been taken as a precautionary measure'. Mohamed-Hamza and Sephora have not yet filed an official complaint, but dismissed the statement. 'It won't bring my daughter back... But we're waiting for answers. There was a breach, and I'm going to fight to identify those responsible.