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Migrant daily arrivals top 1,000 for first time this year

Migrant daily arrivals top 1,000 for first time this year

Independent3 days ago

More than 1,100 migrants arrived in the UK after crossing the English Channel on Saturday, 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, bringing the provisional annual total so far to 14,811.
This is 42% higher than the same point last year (10,448) and 95% up from the same point in 2023 (7,610), according to the PA news agency analysis of the data.
It is still lower than the highest daily total of 1,305 arrivals since data began in 2018, which was recorded on September 3, 2022.
Defence Secretary John Healey said the scenes of migrants being picked up by smugglers 'like a taxi' to be brought to the UK were 'shocking'.
He said it is a 'really big problem' that French police are unable to intervene to intercept boats in shallow waters.
French police officers were seen watching as migrants, including children, 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.
Mr Healey said the UK 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 co-operation needed.
'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,' he told the Sunday Morning With Trevor Phillips programme on Sky News.
He said Britain has 'lost control of its borders over the last five years'.
'Pretty shocking, those scenes yesterday,' Mr Healey said.
He added: 'We saw the smugglers launching elsewhere and coming around like a taxi to pick them up.'
Nigel Farage posted a video on X of what appeared to be migrants in a dinghy marked with Saturday's date.
The Reform UK leader asked: 'Where are all the women and children?'
There were some women and children among those pictured boarding boats in French waters.
The UK agreed a £480 million deal with France to beef up its efforts to stop migrants in 2023 under former prime minister Rishi Sunak.
It was the latest in a series of agreements with France since 2014 aimed at cracking down on crossings.
This year is on course to set a record, with the 14,811 total arrivals so far the highest recorded for the first five months of a year.
It has also surpassed the highest total recorded for the first six months of the year, which was previously 13,489 on June 30 last year.
In 2024, the number of arrivals did not reach more than 14,000 until July 9 (14,058).
Sir Keir Starmer's Government has pledged to 'smash the gangs' behind people-smuggling operations to bring down crossings.
A Home Office spokesperson pointed to measures to share intelligence internationally, enhance enforcement operations in northern France and introduce tougher rules in its immigration legislation.
'We all want to end dangerous small boat crossings, which threaten lives and undermine our border security.
'The people-smuggling gangs do not care if the vulnerable people they exploit live or die, as long as they pay and we will stop at nothing to dismantle their business models and bring them to justice.
'That is why this Government has put together a serious plan to take down these networks at every stage.'

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‘It really is a melting pot': Belfast primary school where 17 languages are spoken wins international award
‘It really is a melting pot': Belfast primary school where 17 languages are spoken wins international award

Belfast Telegraph

time5 minutes ago

  • Belfast Telegraph

‘It really is a melting pot': Belfast primary school where 17 languages are spoken wins international award

Such is the diversity at Cliftonville Integrated Primary in north Belfast. But the school has risen to the task of providing an education and integration in a changing social landscape and has now been rewarded with the British Council's International School Award 2024-2027 – the only recipient in Northern Ireland. The UK-wide award scheme celebrates schools that bring the wider world into the classroom, creating a safe and welcoming environment for all pupils, fostering a culture of inclusion and celebrating diversity. Bill Fletcher is principal of Cliftonville Integrated Primary, which has over 400 pupils and is already a designated school of sanctuary. He said that while the vast majority of the children are from the home nations, they do have kids from all over the world. 'There are challenges in the sense that if you have children coming in who have no English, that's difficult for the teachers. 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It's a school that embraces all cultures and diversities. They make children not just aware of that, but increase their curiosity, increase their learning and I think increase their kindness through the exposure to lots of different cultures. 'I'm a big fan of bilingualism, even multilingualism in schools. It's wonderful for the development of children, their learning and their capacity to embrace different subjects as they progress their academic life. 'It's not necessarily just about making them fluent in lots of different languages. It's about that exposure to different cultures, different parts of our world, and to embed that in our own curriculum is something that would be celebrated. We don't need to look any further than Cliftonville Integrated Primary School to see how that can be done really well.' 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Boisson lights up French Open, Sinner advances to semis
Boisson lights up French Open, Sinner advances to semis

Reuters

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  • Reuters

Boisson lights up French Open, Sinner advances to semis

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Challengers had a US man winning the French Open. Reality is very different
Challengers had a US man winning the French Open. Reality is very different

The Guardian

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  • The Guardian

Challengers had a US man winning the French Open. Reality is very different

The most shocking moment of the 2024 psychosexual tennis film Challengers is not the traumatic knee injury, any frame from the quasi-sex scenes, or the passionate rally with which the movie concludes. It's the reveal that one of the characters, American ATP tennis player Art Donaldson, has won the French Open twice, a stat so foreign to US men we must have a sequel simply for Donaldson to explain how he found success on clay. No American man has lifted the trophy – or even made the semi-finals – on the Parisian clay courts since Andre Agassi did so in 1999. And at the time of Challengers' release, no American man had made the quarter-finals since (bet you won't guess this one) Agassi in 2003. American women have a storied history on clay – Chris Evert's seven Roland-Garros titles and 125-match winning streak on the surface are legend; Serena Williams won Roland-Garros three times; Coco Gauff goes deep there every year and is back in the semi-finals this time – but the men, outside a brief burst in the 1980s and 1990s, have had little luck in the Open era. The 21st-century union between American men and Parisian clay courts is, somehow, more distant and fraught than Art's relationship with his wife, Tashi, in Challengers. The former of those relationships may be getting a tad more affectionate though. At Roland-Garros this year, Americans Tommy Paul and Frances Tiafoe broke the 22-year quarter-final drought. Tiafoe, previously an unaccomplished clay player, dialed in his whipped forehand and bunted backhand and didn't drop a set en route to the last eight. Paul scrapped to get there, gritting out a comeback from two sets down against the musclebound Marton Fucsovics and a marathon against Karen Khachanov despite a lower ab injury and a relative lack of raw pace on his shots. A smattering of other Americans fell short of the quarter-finals, but impressed nonetheless: Ben Shelton pushed defending champion Carlos Alcaraz to a tight four sets, unheralded Ethan Quinn made the third round. So no Art Donaldson heroics here, but certainly reason for optimism. The question is how much. The American men's runs ended abruptly and with little struggle. Paul's physical issues intensified, making him ideal prey that Alcaraz feasted ravenously on in the quarter-finals: 6-0, 6-1, 6-4. And Tiafoe lost in four sets to Lorenzo Musetti, a clay-courter by trade, accounting for himself well until 5-5 in a decisive third set before losing eight of the final 10 games. The matches outlined the highest standard of play on the slow, shifting clay surface. 'Tiafoe ran up against somebody who really is a clay-courter,' Steve Tignor, a longtime senior writer for said on Tuesday. 'He hadn't lost a set, but I don't know if he'd played anybody who was a really top-tier clay-court guy, who could really make him hit a lot of balls.' We spoke before Alcaraz-Paul, but asked about Paul's potential to win the match, Tignor said, 'I don't really give him too serious a chance.' In an early rally against Alcaraz, Paul got off some of his best groundstrokes, steadily pushing Alcaraz from side to side while improving his own court position. But on the run, from miles beyond the baseline, Alcaraz suddenly uncorked a forehand down the line that blazed past Paul. The shot signified the tennis gods' uneven distribution of gifts. Such power, so far outside Paul's capabilities and so comfortably within Alcaraz's, cannot be acquired or taught, only identified and honed. Even if Tiafoe or Paul had made the final, world No 1 Jannik Sinner most likely would have been waiting. Sinner hits heavy and hard with no cost to accuracy, a living nightmare of an opponent. 'Sinner already seems like a guy, maybe even more than Alcaraz, who's just going to stand in the way of the Americans,' Tignor said. 'I imagine if any of the Americans had come up against him [at Roland-Garros], they would have lost.' In April, Tiafoe told Reem Abulleil that tennis is more open since the end of the Big Three era: 'Anybody can win slams.' In the wake of the retirements of Roger Federer and Rafael Nadal, plus Novak Djokovic finally showing signs of slowing down, this figured to be an accurate take on the new tennis world order. Empirical evidence so far suggests otherwise. Sinner and Alcaraz have shared the last five major titles and are in their early 20s. They look intent on spending the next decade gradually proving Tiafoe's quote wrong. Paul and Tiafoe performed as well as can be expected at Roland-Garros. So what's the future for the American men on clay, this surface once more ruled by generational talents? There seems to be no room for mere mortals, but that's hardly the mortals' fault. They'll keep trying, keep improving, and perhaps eventually this country of 340 million will once again produce a men's Roland-Garros champion. Until then, American fans can best do justice to their rooting interests by respecting the enormity of the task.

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