logo
First migrants detained in UK under new UK-France returns deal

First migrants detained in UK under new UK-France returns deal

ITV News4 hours ago
Migrants who arrived in the UK after crossing the English Channel have been detained under the new 'one in, one out' returns deal announced last month by Prime Minister Keir Starmer and his French counterpart Emmanuel Macron.
The first detentions came as people arrived in Dover on Wednesday, which was the first day the pilot scheme came into force.
Pictures showed the migrants wearing life jackets and disembarking from Border Force boats.
The Home Office said detentions began for those who arrived on Wednesday afternoon and they will be held in immigration removal centres until they are returned to France.
Home Secretary Yvette Cooper said: 'Yesterday, under the terms of this groundbreaking new treaty, the first group of people to cross the Channel were detained after their arrival at Western Jet Foil and will now be held in detention until they can be returned to France.
'That sends a message to every migrant currently thinking of paying organised crime gangs to go to the UK that they will be risking their lives and throwing away their money if they get into a small boat.'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

The revolution will be TikTokked
The revolution will be TikTokked

New Statesman​

time4 minutes ago

  • New Statesman​

The revolution will be TikTokked

Illustration by Marie Montocchio / Ikon Images Why do we say 'pardon my French' when we swear? Some say the expression comes from the time when our ruling class spoke French. A lofty Norman, snooty Plantagenet or indeed a shrugging Angevin would lapse into French mid-conversation, then kittenishly apologise for being oh so helplessly de sang bleu. Common islanders would retort with a homegrown profanity – something about hounds' arses – then mockingly return, 'pardon my French'. Of course you never really know how true such explanations are. But that one tells you something. The lesson is that power must be fluent in the modes of its day. That is why Yvette Cooper cannot simply smash the gangs: she must also break the internet. The Home Secretary made some changes to her media rounds on Tuesday (5 August). She was promoting her 'one in, one out' small-boat deportation treaty with France. As well as speaking to the usual outlets, Cooper took questions from what officials are calling the 'digital lobby'. She answered the TikTok accounts Politics UK, Simple Politics and the Daily Mail's TikTok. Critics have pointed out that it was not quite the performance of a deep-fried digital native. Cooper addressed the camera from her podium in front of two 'Home Office' screens. It was a little old school, a little stiff. But she was wise to get stuck in. The phones are out and all the eyeballs are there. Last month the Times found that students are set to spend 25 years of their lives on their phones. Mobile phone usage has almost tripled over the last decade. Vertical video – TikTok, YouTube shorts, Instagram reels and whatever Facebook's one is called – is one key medium of this age. Last year the average UK citizen spent 42 hours a month on the app. The other key form is the podcast. Its political necessity is better developed and better recognised. America's most recent election was hailed as the first 'podcast election'. Trump did the circuit, Kamala didn't, Trump won. Politicians unable to perform will be left behind, unheard from, unthought of. As Andrew Marr warned in these pages, 'we should not be calm about this memetic war zone… the political class has to spend more time engaging on Instagram, TikTok and X.' Dominic Cummings says legacy media has roughly zero relevance now. Subscribe to The New Statesman today from only £8.99 per month Subscribe Are you keenly awaiting the next gig by German-Swiss composer Nikolaus Matthes? Why not? By critical consensus, the man is just as good as Bach and Beethoven. You know why. All great successes ride the crests of their moment's waves. Even Bob Dylan, who seems so instantly eternal, so heroically irrelevant, became immortal by going electric. It has always been necessary to stand on the cutting edge. Fascism famously spread on the radio. The American revolutionaries like Thomas Paine harnessed cheap print to stir popular sentiment with pamphlets. JFK, Thatcher, Reagan and Blair profited from TV. Indeed it is not long since the Labour Party were setting the pace on communications. Alastair Campbell's engineered the media handler archetype that endures today. New Labour also instituted new communications units to push their message beyond the political press. Before that, in opposition, New Labour developed the intimidatingly named Excalibur computer, which produced rapid rebuttals to Tory aspersions. The current Labour government recently unsheathed a new weapon of its own. Former Sun editor David Dinsmore was communications chief. But so far, Nigel Farage is the British politician dominating the new forms. He has more TikTok followers than every other MP added together. The rest of the political class is nervous to make such a plunge. Some worry that short video only permits crass oversimplifications. But podcasts, which are enmeshed with vertical video, allow more elaboration than even 'golden-era' political TV formats. Another fear is that traditional politicians going to the young's party can only be cringe. But Zohran Mamdani, the New York mayoral candidate, seems a promising light in the American left's hopes. And even David Cameron got pretty handy at charming, slick video updates during his stint as foreign secretary. And anyway, if they don't fill the space, someone else will. Jeff Bezos put a note in the Washington Post, after buying the paper, entitled 'The hard truth: Americans don't trust the news media'. He wrote, 'those who fight reality lose. Reality is an undefeated champion.' You might not like Bezos. Politicians might not like the new mediascape. But you are about as likely to stop using Amazon as voters are to get off TikTok. It is true that the government has signalled a hope of lowering British screen time. But that would be a full-time brief for a designated minister. In the meantime, the rest of them should get with the moment. History will not promote anachronisms. We're not going to start listening to classical music again. Barring a really shocking escalation in our fishy acrimony, we're not returning to a Francophone ruling class. And certainly, we're not putting down our phones. If Cooper's was not a natural on TikTok, she was still right to start trying. But she may never succeed. The new formats do seem better suited to a populist brand of politics. So far none of its left-wing winners, Zohran Mamdani or Zack Polanski, have won without lifting from that style. One thinks of the historian Perry Anderson's assertion that the left can now only win by evolving a 'left populism'. TikTok has not yet changed all our politicians, but it has already changed all of our politics. History will be written by the scrollers. [See also: The Online Safety Act humiliates us all] Related

Fury as man lights cigarette on eternal flame of Tomb of Unknown Soldier
Fury as man lights cigarette on eternal flame of Tomb of Unknown Soldier

Daily Mirror

time4 minutes ago

  • Daily Mirror

Fury as man lights cigarette on eternal flame of Tomb of Unknown Soldier

A homeless man who "defied" a war memorial by stepping over the guard rail to light a cigarette on the flame now faces deportation after turning a country against himself A man who defiled a war memorial by lighting a cigarette on the eternal flame of France's Tomb of the Unknown Soldier is facing deportation. The disrespectful act was caught on camera and has been spread across social media, where the man can be seen climbing over the barrier at the iconic Arc de Triomphe in Paris and lighting his cigarette on the flame. ‌ The incident quickly caught attention across France, sparking outrage, with the public calling for the man to receive some punishment. Bruno Retailleau, France's interior minister (equivalent to the UK Home Secretary), posted on X to call out the disgusting act: 'This unworthy and deplorable act undermines the memory of those who died for France.' ‌ While the French veterans minister hit out at the man, calling the act 'not a mere misstep, but a desecration' Retailleau added: 'France will never tolerate the tarnishing of the memory of those who died for her. Never.' It comes after mindless yobs damage 41 cars in vandalism rampage through sleepy market town. ‌ ‌ After an investigation by the authorities, they found the suspect was a homeless man originally from Morocco named Hamdi H. As a result of his actions, he will have his residence permit revoked, leading to his deportation back to North Africa. According to French newspaper Le Figaro, the man was arrested on Tuesday evening, and after initially denying the accusations, he soon admitted to being the man in the video. The official accusation is for "violating a burial site, tomb, cinerary urn, or monument erected in memory of the dead", a crime that can carry up to a year in prison and a €15,000 fine. They also report that the man is a repeat offender and well known to Parisian police, having 21 previous incidents on his record, including car theft, vandalism, and racial violence. ‌ The Latvian tourists who filmed the video added: 'He didn't seem to be drunk or under the influence of drugs. On the contrary, he was clearly aware of what he was doing, and proud of having done it.' The news came just weeks after an incident closer to hom e when a man wearing only a pair of shorts and a baseball cap climbed up Birmingham's Hall of Memory - a monument in commemoration of people who died in WWI. Once on the memorial, instead of listening to pleas to climb straight back down, the man brazenly said he would get down "when he was ready' seemingly ignoring the historic story behind the monument. Thankfully, the man's actions did not go so far as to damage the monument, which was built in 1925 in tribute to Birmingham citizens who died in the Great War.

First detentions of migrants crossing Channel under UK-France returns deal
First detentions of migrants crossing Channel under UK-France returns deal

South Wales Guardian

time6 minutes ago

  • South Wales Guardian

First detentions of migrants crossing Channel under UK-France returns deal

The first detentions came as people arrived in Dover on Wednesday, the first day the pilot scheme came into force. Pictures showed the migrants wearing life jackets disembarking from Border Force boats. The Home Office said detentions began for those who arrived on Wednesday afternoon and they will be held in immigration removal centres until they are returned to France. Home Secretary Yvette Cooper said: 'Yesterday, under the terms of this groundbreaking new treaty, the first group of people to cross the Channel were detained after their arrival at Western Jet Foil and will now be held in detention until they can be returned to France. 'That sends a message to every migrant currently thinking of paying organised crime gangs to go to the UK that they will be risking their lives and throwing away their money if they get into a small boat.' UK officials aim to make referrals for returns to France within three days of a migrant's arrival by small boat while French authorities will respond within 14 days. This is in exchange for an approved asylum seeker in France to be brought to the UK under a safe route. This process has now also been launched, with adults and families in France able to express an interest in coming to the UK through an online platform set up by the Home Office. They will have to meet suitability criteria, standard visa application process and security checks. If accepted, they would be given three months in the UK to claim asylum or apply for a visa, and would be subject to the same rules for all asylum seekers not allowed to work, study or have access to benefits. The Home Office is expected to launch a campaign in the coming days to make migrants in northern France and elsewhere aware of the new treaty. Ms Cooper added: 'Criminal gangs have spent seven years embedding themselves along our border and it will take time to unravel them, but these detentions are an important step towards undermining their business model and unravelling the false promises they make.' The Home Secretary has previously said the accord is not a 'silver bullet' to stop small boat crossings, but marked a step change as migrants will be sent back across the Channel for the first time. Ministers have rejected criticism that the returns deal leaves open a loophole for human rights laws to be exploited for migrants to avoid deportation. Efforts to crack down on illegal working and remove migrants with no right to be in the UK from the country are continuing as ministers grapple to curb the crossings.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store