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Keir Starmer accused of failing in his mission to 'smash the gangs' as figures show only a tiny fraction of small boat migrants are prosecuted - as the Tories say the smugglers have 'never had it easi

Keir Starmer accused of failing in his mission to 'smash the gangs' as figures show only a tiny fraction of small boat migrants are prosecuted - as the Tories say the smugglers have 'never had it easi

Daily Mail​a day ago
Keir Starmer was last night accused of failing in his mission to 'smash the gangs'.
Figures show that just a tiny fraction of migrants crossing the Channel are being brought to justice.
Since Labour's leader became Prime Minister last July, only 446 people have been charged with any immigration offence, figures published by Parliament have revealed.
Over the same period, a record 43,309 migrants have reached Britain after crossing the Channel in more than 700 dinghies.
This comes despite Sir Keir vowing to tackle the illegal migration crisis by scrapping Rwanda deportations and focusing on tougher law enforcement instead.
The number of those charged includes some offences not related to Channel crossings, so the number of small boat migrants prosecuted was even lower.
There were 153 people charged between last July and this June with the key offence of 'assisting entry of illegal immigrant', which is intended to be used against those piloting each vessel, but Labour insisted the numbers have increased on their watch from 118 in the previous 12 months.
Tory justice spokesman Robert Jenrick said: 'Keir Starmer boasted he would smash the gangs, but the gangs are laughing at him. They've never had it easier and crossings are up 50 per cent as a result. We're now heading towards being the illegal immigration capital of Europe.
Keir Starmer has been accused of failing in his mission to 'smash the gangs' as figures show only a tiny fraction of small boat migrants are prosecuted
Since Labour 's leader became Prime Minister last July, only 446 people have been charged with any immigration offence, figures published by Parliament have revealed. Pictured: A small boat carrying people thought to be migrants
'It's clear Starmer is incapable of stopping the boats and his backbenchers don't want him to. The country cannot go on like this.
'Those that arrive illegally from the safety of France must be swiftly deported so the message is clear: if you break into Britain, you will not get a life here.'
He obtained the new figures in Parliamentary written questions after asking ministers how many gangs had been smashed since Labour came to power.
In a Commons clash this month, he asked Shabana Mahmood: 'Can the Justice Secretary [Ms Mahmood] tell us how many individuals have been prosecuted for smuggling people in on small boats?'
She replied: 'I do not have those figures directly to hand, but I am sure that if they are available, I can write to him with the details.'
He accused her of not having 'a clue' about 'one of the biggest challenges facing our country right now' but she shot back 'had he paid any attention, he would know that prosecutions do not fall to the Ministry of Justice; they are dealt with independently through the Crown Prosecution Service'.
Latest Home Office figures show another 1,387 people have reached Britain in small boats since last Thursday, taking the total for the calendar year so far to 23,891.
A Labour spokesman said: 'Robert Jenrick can reinvent himself as many times as he likes, but he cannot rewrite history.
'With Labour in office, more people were charged with assisting unlawful immigration in our first year in government than in the entire time that Jenrick was in charge of the Immigration System.
'Indeed, we charged more people with that offence in our first three months than he managed in his last six.
'But much more important than Robert Jenrick's failures in the past are the ones he is making now, and we don't just mean screwing up this attempted attack story against Labour.
'If he was truly serious about prosecuting dangerous people smugglers, he would not have voted against our new law to criminalise people who endanger the lives of others in the Channel, and would instead be supporting us to take that action against those who cause women and children to suffocate and drown on overcrowded small boats.'
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