
Scores of migrants board overloaded dinghies to make dangerous Channel crossing to UK – as French cops watch on
French police watched on as one of six boats, filled with adults and children seeking refuge in Britain, departed from a beach in Gravelines, located between Calais and Dunkirk.
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French authorities were then also pictured escorting the small boat as it made its way across the water.
Over the past week, there have not been any arrivals of migrants crossing the Channel in small boats, figures from the Home Office show.
However, 2025 could be on course to have the highest number of Channel crossings ever, with more than 13,000 people having arrived in the UK so far.
That's roughly 30 per cent higher than figures were at the same time last year.
There have been major concerns over both the number of deaths of people making the perilous journey across the Channel and the prevalence of organised smuggling gangs.
Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer has pledged to crack down on these criminals who put migrants' lives at risk, and to eventually reduce the number of small boat crossings.
Just last month, one person tragically died while trying to cross the Channel.
The International Organization for Migration (IOM), which is a UN agency, estimated at least 78 migrants died while making the crossing in 2024, making it the deadliest year on record.
Since 2018, at least 225 migrants have lost their lives making the dangerous journey to the UK, according to the IOM.
Home Secretary Yvette Cooper said previously that gangs had been taking advantage of recent calmer weather days to try and make crossings.
Inside Calais camp where migrants pay thousands to be smuggled into UK
In an interview on the BBC's Sunday with Laura Kuenssberg show, Ms Cooper said: 'The really unacceptable situation we're in is because of the way the criminal gangs have taken hold, our border security ends up being dependent on the weather.
'We cannot continue like this, where the number of calm days affects the number of crossings.'
Ms Cooper insisted 'only a coordinated international response' across the whole migration route could effectively end the reign of the people smugglers.
She admitted the situation was unacceptable and could not continue.
Last month also saw the highest single number of migrants arriving on small boats so far this year, as more than 700 people crossed the English Channel.
Last year, a total of 36,816 migrants illegally crossed the Channel in small boats, up from 29,437 in 2023.
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However, the highest year on record remains 2022, where 45,755 people made the treacherous journey to Britain.
The prime minister has faced scrutiny for failing to reduce the number of small boat crossings, and the influx of illegal migration.
However, he was given a lifeline as Kosovo said it would be "open" to discussions in becoming a return hub for failed UK asylum seekers.
The western Balkan
Other options in the region — a principal route for illegal migrants — are said to include Serbia, North Macedonia and Bosnia-Herzegovina.
No formal talks have yet taken place.
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Lawyers for Ozenbrook's firm did not dispute that his operatives spied on former SFO prosecutors on Vozianov's instructions – though they said there had been no surveillance of serving SFO personnel. The oligarchs' operatives also watched John Gibson, a barrister who had run the SFO's ENRC investigation for four years. Gibson left the SFO for a law firm in 2018. A letter he received two years later from ENRC's lawyers at the US firm Quinn Emanuel stated that he had been seen meeting a journalist in the National Theatre's underground car park in September 2020. An SFO spokesperson said: 'We have been aware of the risk of surveillance for many years and our first priority is always the safety and wellbeing of our colleagues. We note that this report relates to surveillance of former colleagues following their departure from the SFO.' 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