French Coastguard Rescues 119 Migrants From Channel Crossing Attempts
Multiple rescue operations in English Channel come less than a week after UK-France £662m anti-crossing deal
Auf einen Blick
- French coastguard rescued 106 people from a broken-down boat attempting to cross the English Channel, with six more rescued in a separate incident, totaling 119 people.
- The rescues occurred less than a week after the UK and France signed a new £662m agreement to prevent Channel crossings, including deploying riot-trained police to French beaches.
KI-generierte Zusammenfassung
Warum es wichtig ist
The English Channel is one of the world's busiest shipping lanes and presents deadly risks to migrants attempting to cross in small boats. Winter water temperatures can reduce life expectancy to just minutes. The new UK-France agreement represents a significant escalation in efforts to prevent crossings, with riot-trained police to be deployed to French northern coast beaches.
The French coastguard has rescued 106 people travelling in a single boat after it broke down during an attempt to cross the English Channel. French authorities, who first became aware of the stricken vessel on Saturday, said they were put aboard a rescue ship and taken to Calais in the early hours of Sunday morning. They initially intervened to help seven people who got into difficulty while climbing into the boat in the Wimereux area, including a woman who lost consciousness and had to be evacuated by helicopter. The latest rescue comes less than a week after the UK and France agreed a new £662m deal designed to prevent migrants from making the dangerous crossing. Another six people were rescued in a separate incident, taking the total to 119. A French Coast Guard spokesperson said: "This maritime area is one of the busiest in the world, and weather conditions are often harsh (strong winds and currents, numerous sandbanks, and water temperatures that reduce life expectancy to just a few minutes in winter). It is therefore a particularly dangerous area, even when the sea looks calm." On Thursday, Home Secretary Shabana Mahmood signed a three-year agreement with France that would see riot-trained police sent to beaches along the northern coast to stop migrants crossing the Channel in small boats. The Home Office said the agreement would see hundreds of migrants per year "removed from French beaches" and deported to their home countries, or other EU countries they have passed through. Additional funding of up to £160m could be made available if the new tactics curb the number of crossings, though that figure may be reduced if the agreement proves to be ineffective. Between 1 January and 22 April 2026, a total of 6,077 people crossed the English Channel by small boat from France, down by 37% for the same period the previous year.
Worauf zu achten ist
KI-Ausblick — Möglichkeiten, keine Fakten
UK government will announce further funding tranches if crossing numbers continue to decline
Wahrscheinlich · Innerhalb von Monaten
More rescue operations will occur as migrants continue attempting crossings despite the new agreement
Sehr wahrscheinlich · Innerhalb von Wochen
Offene Fragen
- How effective will the new police deployment be in practice?
- What specific countries will migrants be deported to?
- Will the additional £160m funding be triggered?






