logo
The number of migrants reaching the UK in small boats in a single day hits a 2025 high

The number of migrants reaching the UK in small boats in a single day hits a 2025 high

The Hill2 days ago

LONDON (AP) — U.K. government figures Sunday showed nearly 1,200 migrants arrived in the country Saturday in small boats from France across the English Channel, the highest number recorded on a single day so far this year.
The latest Home Office figures show that 1,194 migrants arrived in 18 boats Saturday in what were settled weather conditions, bringing the provisional annual total so far to 14,811.
That's 42% higher than the same point last year, an increase that has piled pressure on the Labour government, which returned to power nearly a year ago partly on disillusionment with the previous Conservative administration 's efforts to get a grip on the the numbers making the crossing.
Having ditched the Conservative government's plan to send migrants who arrived in the U.K. by unauthorized means to Rwanda, Prime Minister Keir Starmer said his government would get control by smashing the gangs and the business models that sustain their smuggling operations.
Since gaining power, Starmer's government has sought better intelligence-sharing internationally, enhanced enforcement operations in northern France and has adopted tougher rules in its immigration legislation.
French police officers were seen watching Saturday as migrants boarded at a beach in Gravelines, between Calais and Dunkirk, and authorities were then pictured escorting the boats. French authorities said they rescued 184 people.
'Pretty shocking, those scenes yesterday,' Defense Secretary John Healey told Sky News.
He added that it is a 'really big problem' that French police are unable to intervene to intercept boats in shallow waters, adding that the U.K. is pressing for the French to put new rules into operation so they can intervene.
'They're not doing it, but, but for the first time for years … we've got the level of cooperation needed,' he told Sky News. 'We've got the agreement that they will change the way they work, and our concentration now is to push them to get that into operation so they can intercept these smugglers and stop these people in the boats, not just on the shore.'
Despite French and U.K. efforts, the cross-Channel route, one of the world's busiest shipping lanes, remains a major smuggling corridor for people fleeing conflict or poverty. Many migrants favor the U.K. for reasons of language, family ties or perceived easier access to asylum and work.
The Home Office says 36,816 people arrived in the UK on small boats in 2024, 25% more than in 2023 (29,437). The highest number of arrivals was in 2022, with 45,774.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Starmer says no independence referendum while he is PM
Starmer says no independence referendum while he is PM

Yahoo

time15 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Starmer says no independence referendum while he is PM

Keir Starmer has said he cannot imagine another Scottish independence referendum taking place during his time as prime minister. The Labour leader insisted it was more important to focus on the economy than the constitution, in remarks described as "a bit arrogant" by the SNP. Scotland's first minister John Swinney recently said he wanted to achieve "demonstrable support" for independence. But Starmer - who visited Scotland ahead of Thursday's Hamilton, Larkhall and Stonehouse by-election - said "nobody's raising that with me as their first priority". Who can I vote for in the Hamilton, Larkhall and Stonehouse by-election? Parties jockey for power in Hamilton by-election In an interview broadcast on the BBC's Good Morning Scotland programme, the prime minister said an SNP victory at next year's Holyrood elections would not change his mind. "I think it's really important to focus on the priorities that matter most," he said. "We got a big election win last year on the basis that we would stabilise the economy and ensure that on that foundation we built a stronger Scotland in a stronger United Kingdom and that's what I intend to do." Starmer told the programme his recent talks with John Swinney had not focused on independence. He said: "Nobody's raising that with me as their first priority, certainly in the discussions I'm having with the first minister. "We're talking about jobs, energy, security and dealing with the cost of living crisis." However SNP MP Stephen Gethins told Good Morning Scotland the prime minister's remarks were disappointing to hear. He said: "It's a bit disappointing and maybe a little bit arrogant of the prime minister to think he can speak for everyone. This shouldn't be an issue that's decided by one person, this should be a matter for the people of Scotland." Gethins added: "There is a significant question for pro-union politicians like Keir Starmer which is, what is the test for an independence referendum? You can't just keep on saying no." Last month, the first minister talked about securing "demonstrable support" for breaking up the United Kingdom. Swinney compared this to the 1997 referendum for a Scottish parliament, which was backed by around 74% of Scots. But the SNP leader also told BBC Scotland News that it was "completely unacceptable" for the independence movement "to be thwarted by a Westminster government that just folds its arms and says 'no'." Deputy First Minister Kate Forbes accused Starmer of "ignoring the issues that people in Scotland care about". She said it was her government's job to show Scots "why they don't need to be content with the revolving door of a Labour and a Tory and perhaps even a Reform prime minister". The SNP MSP added: "It's Keir Starmer that's opened the door to Nigel Farage by completely disappointing everybody who voted for change." Former Conservative minister Michael Gove has said there could be a second Scottish independence referendum if the public show "overwhelming support" for one. Gove, who sat in the cabinet for most of the period between 2010 and 2024, said he didn't think another referendum was necessary. However, he conceded that the UK government may have to change approach if SNP popularity and support for another vote grows. Gove was part of a government that rejected requests from the Scottish government for a second referendum. He denied that this was anti-democratic and insisted that Scotland had "more important" issues to deal with. Gove now suggests that the likelihood of a second independence vote was linked to the SNP's ability to improve public services. "If, for the sake of argument, the SNP make all of those decisions in government in a way that gives people confidence in them then we might be in a different position [on a second referendum]," he said. Independence has slipped down the political agenda since the UK Supreme Court ruled that any new referendum would need to be agreed by the UK government. There was also the heavy defeat of the SNP by Labour at last year's UK general election. That doesn't mean the issue has gone away entirely. Support for independence remains relatively strong in opinion polls even if it is not the most pressing issue for most voters. In his first period in office, John Swinney has decided to concentrate on trying to deliver improvements in public services and reducing child poverty. If he can show genuine progress by the Holyrood election next year, he hopes that will rebuild trust with Scottish voters and sustain him in power. He wants to build support for independence over time until the case for another referendum becomes difficult for any UK government to resist. Expect the SNP to talk up Scotland's prospects as an independent country as the Holyrood vote draws nearer and for their pro-union rivals to argue that staying part of the UK is a better option in an unstable world. Gove 'in agreement' with Swinney over second independence referendum

Pornhub owner pressures France over age verification law
Pornhub owner pressures France over age verification law

Yahoo

time31 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Pornhub owner pressures France over age verification law

French visitors to the Pornhub and Youporn, adult sites operated by parent company Aylo, will from Wednesday be greeted with a message denouncing the country's age verification requirements, the company said. By showing the message rather than Pornhub's vast library of adult content, Aylo "is communicating directly with the French people to tell them how dangerous, how potentially privacy-infringing, and how ineffective the French law is," Solomon Friedman of Aylo's owner, Ethical Capital Partners, told reporters in a video call on Tuesday. Paris has this year gradually introduced requirements for all adult websites to have users confirm their age with details like a credit card or ID document. In a bid to preserve privacy, operators must offer a third-party "double-blind" option that would keep the platforms themselves from seeing users' identifying information. But Aylo says this is an ineffective mechanism that puts people's data at risk from bad actors, hacks or leaks. They say countries should target developers of operating systems like Microsoft's Windows, Apple's iOS or Google's Android, rather than porn platforms. "Aylo is extremely pro the concept of age verification," executive Alex Kekesi told reporters in a video call. But requiring individual platforms to confirm visitors' ages "poses a very serious risk... with respect to your privacy rights," she added. "Google, Apple and Microsoft all have the capability built into their operating system to verify the age of the user at the operating system or device level," ECP's Friedman said. Their ability "to supply an age signal to any site or app... can actually provide a solution" for controlling access to adult content without requiring users to share sensitive data with multiple websites, he argued. "I understand that those three entities are large and they're powerful, but that is not an excuse for France to do what they have done." Aylo's message to would-be porn viewers will be topped with the image of "Liberty leading the people" from Eugene Delacroix's renowned bare-breasted painting of the allegorical figure. Culture Minister Aurore Berge wrote on X Tuesday that it was "so much the better" if Pornhub and other Aylo properties cut off access for French users rather than "conforming to our legal framework". "There will be less violent, degrading and humiliating content accessible to minors in France," she added. tgb/srg/phz

Macron wax statue stolen from Paris museum for anti-Russian protest
Macron wax statue stolen from Paris museum for anti-Russian protest

Yahoo

time31 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Macron wax statue stolen from Paris museum for anti-Russian protest

Greenpeace activists took a statue of French President Emmanuel Macron and placed it outside the Russian embassy in Paris on Monday to protest continued business ties between the two countries, as well as Macron's climate policies. Activists said they 'borrowed' the statue of Macron from the Grévin Museum in central Paris, which contains waxworks of more than 200 public figures, at 10.30 a.m. local time (4.30 a.m. ET) Monday, according to a statement from Greenpeace. 'He does not deserve to be exhibited in this world-renowned cultural institution until he has terminated French contracts with Russia and initiated an ambitious and sustainable ecological transition across Europe,' reads the statement. The activists took the statue to the Russian embassy in the west of the French capital, where they placed it in front of banners decrying continued trade with Moscow in areas such as gas, nuclear power and chemical fertilizers. One person held a sign which read 'business is business' behind the statue, which depicts a smiling Macron clapping his hands. Another banner read 'Ukraine is burning, business goes on.' Despite pledging to end their reliance on Russian fuel, European nations have struggled to end imports of products such as liquified natural gas (LNG). According to research from the Centre for Research on Energy and Clean Air (CREA), France was the largest importer of Russian fossil fuels of any European Union country in January, with LNG imports totalling 377 million euros ($430 million). Greenpeace also criticized the continuation of nuclear fuel import contracts involving Russian nuclear agency Rosatom. 'Emmanuel Macron must abandon his nuclear revival. To persist on this path is to persist in a dangerous dependence on hostile regimes like Russia, and to continue financing the industry of a criminal regime,' said Roger Spautz, energy transition campaigner at Greenpeace France, in the statement. 'There is no sovereignty, no energy transition, and no peace possible with Vladimir Putin's uranium. It is time to put an end to this double standard and turn the page on nuclear power, once and for all.' In the statement, Greenpeace criticized what it called 'Macron's double-talk, which fails to do enough to end trade with Russia, even though he publicly displays strong support for Ukraine.' 'This ambiguous stance weakens France's credibility on the international stage and fuels the Kremlin's war chest,' it added. CNN has contacted Greenpeace for further details on where the statue is now and whether it will be returned to the museum. The Grévin Museum and Macron's office have been contacted for comment. CNN's Pierre Bairin contributed reporting.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store