Sudanese migrant, 16, dies trying to cross Channel to Britain

The body of a 16-year-old Sudanese migrant washed up on a French beach this morning as he became the first refugee to die this year while trying to cross the Channel to Britain.

The teenager got into difficulty in the sea on Tuesday night and was discovered at Sangatte, near Calais, this morning.

He is thought to have fallen overboard from an inflatable boat while attempting the crossing. 

Later, dozens of migrants reached the UK from France by small boat this morning, after a record 1,265 landed already this month – smashing the 1,118 who arrived throughout July.

The shocking death comes amid weeks of arguing between Home Secretary Priti Patel and French authorities over the crossings. 

Ms Patel has demanded the French make the route ‘unviable’, while Calais officials have blamed Britain for the crisis.

Speaking after the news broke, the home secretary described the death as ‘upsetting and tragic’ and called on France to work with the UK to stop ‘abhorrent people smugglers’. 

The body of the teenager was found just after 7am on Wednesday morning after it was spotted by morning dog walkers, said a source working for the emergency services in Calais.

‘Everybody has known for a long while that a fatality was imminent. This tragedy is terrible,’ the source added. 

The teenager got into difficulty in the sea on Tuesday night and was discovered at Sangatte, near Calais, this morning. He is thought to have fallen overboard from an inflatable boat while attempting the crossing, which was completed by other migrants this morning

The boy, 16, fell overboard while attempting to cross the Channel last night. Dozens of migrants reached the UK today after setting out last night from France to try and dodge the storm

The boy, 16, fell overboard while attempting to cross the Channel last night. Dozens of migrants reached the UK today after setting out last night from France to try and dodge the storm

Home Secretary Priti Patel described the death 'upsetting and tragic' and called on France to work with the UK to stop 'abhorrent people smugglers'

Home Secretary Priti Patel described the death ‘upsetting and tragic’ and called on France to work with the UK to stop ‘abhorrent people smugglers’

The Calais emergency services source added: ‘Police and paramedics attended the scene, and efforts were made on the beach in Sangatte to try and revive the victim.

‘Papers were found on him which showed he was a Sudanese man, aged sixteen. He disappeared overnight on Tuesday while trying to get to England.

‘The victim’s body was taken away, and will be subject to an autopsy. Efforts will also be made to contact next of kin.’

The source said that a couple with a six-year-old child and an 18-month-old baby were among those who had been rescued in the Channel by the French emergency services on Sunday in a kayak.

Commenting on the death, Ms Patel wrote: ‘This is an upsetting and tragic loss of a young life. This horrendous incident serves as a brutal reminder of the abhorrent criminal gangs and people smugglers who exploit vulnerable people. 

‘Working together we are determined to stop them.’

She was responding to a tweet from France’s Citizenship Minister Marlene Schiappa, who said: ‘Immense sadness: a 16-year-old Sudanese migrant who disappeared at sea last night was found dead on Sangatte beach this morning.’ 

Ms Schiappa added that the ‘unbearable drama mobilises us against smugglers who take advantage of the distress of human beings’. 

Bella Sankey, director of Detention Action, criticised Ms Patel.

She said: ‘It is devastating to learn that a child has now died in the Channel while trying to seek safety in the UK. This is a horrifying but wholly expected death.

The body of the teenager was found just after 7am on Wednesday morning after it was spotted by morning dog walkers. Pictured are migrants arriving in Dover

The body of the teenager was found just after 7am on Wednesday morning after it was spotted by morning dog walkers. Pictured are migrants arriving in Dover

France and Britain are set to outline a plan of action which is expected to see France paying £30m to strengthen security in the English Channel

France and Britain are set to outline a plan of action which is expected to see France paying £30m to strengthen security in the English Channel

‘We have repeatedly warned Priti Patel it was only a matter of time before her toxic policy to deny safe and legal routes to the UK would cost lives.

‘This death lies firmly at her door. She should consider her position.’

Labour shadow home secretary Nick Thomas-Symonds slammed the government over the death.

He said: ‘The news of the death of a 16-year-old boy in the Channel is heartbreaking and our thoughts are with his loved ones.

‘The Government’s response to the situation in the Channel has been lacking in compassion and competence.

‘Ministers urgently need to step up work with international partners to find a humanitarian solution to this crisis, which is costing lives.’

Mayor of London Sadiq Khan said on Twitter of the 16-year-old’s death: ‘Utterly heartbreaking. By closing safe routes to seek asylum we are pushing desperate people into dangerous situations with devastating consequences.

‘Our Govt must make protecting and saving lives a priority in their approach to English Channel crossings.’

Today’s tragedy is believed to be first known migrant death this year despite more than 4,800 making the treacherous crossing. 

Last August, two people died trying to reach Britain – one of them an Iranian woman who fell overboard and whose body was found in Dutch waters weeks later.

And a 48-year-old Iraqi man was found dead in Belgian waters after he tried to swim to the UK using plastic bottles as a makeshift life jacket. 

France and Britain are set to outline a plan of action which is expected to see France paying £30m to strengthen security in the English Channel.

While the British government has continually accused the French of not doing enough to intercept small boats packed with migrants, the French believe the real problems are in the UK.

Philippe Mignonet, the deputy mayor of Calais, said last week: ‘Yes, I fear a tragedy one day at sea, but the British blame us for their own hypocrisy.

‘The migrants go to Great Britain because they can work in the black economy when they want, because there is no control, not on the street or in the workplace.’

Mr Mignonet’s words were backed up by Bernard Barron, president of the SNSM sea rescue service in Calais.

Mr Barron said: ‘The British criticise migrants for wanting to come but they do not criticise themselves, questioning the reasons that make their country so attractive.

‘The SNSM now observes that the candidates for exile have mastered the sea and, with GPS support, wait until they are in British waters to send out an SOS call.’

Chris Philp, Britain’s immigration minister, attended bilateral talks about the problem in Paris last week and agreed more money was needed.

‘It’s clear more needs to be done,’ said Mr Philp. ‘If we can make this [English Channel] route unviable, which we are determined to do, then migrants will have no reason at all to come to France in the first place.’

Ms Patel previously insisted she is working to make the Calais to Dover migrant route ‘completely unviable’.

She earlier warned France the UK will not cough up millions of pounds for anti-migrant patrols unless it agrees to take back more refugees as she prepares sweeping changes to the ‘broken’ immigration system.

The Home Secretary told Tory MPs that she was preparing legal changes that would ‘send the left into meltdown’.

In a Zoom call with hardline backbenchers she suggested that the system was being ‘exploited by leftie Labour-supporting lawyers’ who were doing everything they could to stop the Government removing people.

And she said that France’s demand for £30million to fund Channel patrols and surveillance would be dependent on it taking in more of those seeking to get to the UK, the Times reported.  

Recent reports have revealed how traffickers take advantage of vulnerable asylum seekers desperately fleeing their homelands by offering a paid-for arrangement at a camp in Calais.

The most expensive package, gold, costs £10,000 and means you get a larger boat with better conditions, less other people and lifejackets, as reported by The Sun. 

One migrant who was hoping to make the journey in the next few days told the newspaper: ‘The prices vary. It depends on the size of the boat and how many people are inside.

‘People come around offering the crossings. We pay and keep in touch. They tell us when and where to go and pick us up.

‘I’m looking forward to it. Britain is like heaven to me!’  

The silver package costs between £3,000 and £5,000, and means you get a worse boat. And the lowest package, bronze, means you pay a prize of £1,000 or less and are often crammed onto a stolen boat. 

So far this year, at least 4,822 migrants have reached Britain by boat. 

On Sunday, a migrant in his 20s was attacked by a thug who saw him land on the beach at Kingsdown near Deal, Kent. 

Calais Jungle is home to hundreds who have already been told they CANNOT stay in EU – as 70% of migrants who sail into Europe from Libya do not qualify for asylum, reveals UN report

The Calais Jungle migrant camp is filled with hundreds who have already been told they cannot stay in the EU, it has been claimed. 

Tony Smith, the former director general of the Border Force, has said that officials are seeing the ‘same faces’ among those attempting to make the crossing from Calais to the UK.

It comes as it was revealed that the majority of migrants using one of the most common sea routes into Europe are not in need of ‘international protection’, according to a UN report.

The United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees found that more than 70 per cent of migrants crossing from Libya to Europe are unlikely to qualify for asylum when they arrive. 

Vincent Cochetel, the UNHCR special envoy for the region, also admitted that a ‘fair and equitable return mechanism’ must be put in place.

The former director general of the Border Force, has said that officials are seeing the 'same faces' among those attempting to make the crossing from Calais to the UK

The former director general of the Border Force, has said that officials are seeing the ‘same faces’ among those attempting to make the crossing from Calais to the UK

It comes as it was revealed that the majority of migrants using one of the most common sea routes into Europe are not in need of 'international protection'

It comes as it was revealed that the majority of migrants using one of the most common sea routes into Europe are not in need of ‘international protection’

If it is not, then ‘the entire asylum system will be called into question’.

Of the 41,129 migrants who have come to Europe this year, 18.3 per cent are from Tunisia, while 10.3 per cent are from Algeria.  

According to the UNHCR report, migrants who travelled from Libya to Italy and Malta made up 68 per cent of arrivals to Europe via the Central Mediterranean between January and May.

Around 8,600 people have departed from the North African country by sea, with Bangladeshis, Sudanese and Somalis the most common nationalities making the crossing.

The report reads: ‘As of the end of May, an estimated 28% of the people who had crossed the sea from Libya are likely to be in need of international protection.’

The vast majority of those attempting to reach Britain from Calais have travelled over land through the EU, experts say.

The news comes amid an increase in migrant crossings in the UK, with a record number attempting to come over in small boats from Calais.   

Former Border Force director general Tony Smith told the Telegraph: ‘A lot of people who are in Calais have already been told that they cannot stay in the EU, some of them have been refused in a couple of different countries, but they don’t want to go back.

‘The French can’t remove them so they are just their names and details and telling them to stop trying to break the law.’

The news comes amid an increase in migrant crossings in the UK, with a record number attempting to come over in small boats from Calais

The news comes amid an increase in migrant crossings in the UK, with a record number attempting to come over in small boats from Calais

Hundreds of migrants have been landing on the Kent coast in recent weeks as warm weather and calm sea conditions encouraged them over from France. Pictured, UK border force officials with migrants on August 15

Hundreds of migrants have been landing on the Kent coast in recent weeks as warm weather and calm sea conditions encouraged them over from France. Pictured, UK border force officials with migrants on August 15

Mr Smith now chairs an international border association including the UK border force.

He said that smugglers have the ‘upper hand’ and it will encourage more people to travel to northern France to ‘try their luck’ as the smugglers have found ‘a gap in our defences’.

He also insisted migrants crossings were an international issue and called on assistance and action from the French.  

He added: ‘We must put the smugglers out of business. These are busy shipping lanes, the boats could get run over by a ferry without even knowing it, and babies drowning in the Channel is not what anyone wants to see.

‘There is a real reason for stopping this no matter what your opinion on asylum is, this is a matter of life of death. These are human beings and these organised criminal gangs do not care if they survive or not.’