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BackUK Signs £662m Deal with France to Deploy Riot-Trained Police to Stop Channel Crossings
UK Signs £662m Deal with France to Deploy Riot-Trained Police to Stop Channel Crossings
In Entwicklung
BBC News22.04.2026Politik3 dk okuma

UK Signs £662m Deal with France to Deploy Riot-Trained Police to Stop Channel Crossings

New three-year agreement includes 50 riot-trained officers, drones, helicopters and performance-based funding that can be withdrawn after one year

Auf einen Blick

  • The UK has signed a new £662m three-year deal with France to deploy at least 50 riot-trained police officers to French beaches, along with drones, helicopters and camera systems, to stop illegal migrants crossing the English Channel.
  • The agreement includes performance-based funding where around £100m could be withdrawn after a year if French authorities fail to reduce crossings sufficiently.
  • The deal comes amid increased Channel crossings with 41,472 arrivals in 2025 and over 6,000 in 2026 so far.

KI-generierte Zusammenfassung

Warum es wichtig ist

The UK has previously paid France £476m under a 2023 deal for extra patrols. Channel crossings have increased over the past three years, with 41,472 arrivals in 2025. The previous arrangement was due to expire next month.

Schriftgröße

Riot-trained police will be sent to beaches in France as part of a new £662m deal with the UK to stop illegal migrants from crossing the English Channel. Home Secretary Shabana Mahmood is expected to sign the three-year agreement with France on Thursday, which will see at least 50 police officers, each trained in "riot and crowd control tactics", drafted in to tackle violence and "hostile crowds".

The deal will also involve France deploying millions of pounds worth of drones, two new helicopters, and a new camera system to track down and intercept people smugglers and illegal migrants. For the first time, ministers have said around £100m of UK funding could be redirected or withdrawn after a year, if French authorities do not stop enough people making the journey.

Speaking ahead of the new deal being signed, Mahmood said: "Our work with the French has stopped tens of thousands of illegal migrants boarding boats headed to Britain. But we must do more. This landmark deal will stop illegal migrants making the perilous journey and put people smugglers behind bars."

The Conservatives accused the government of handing over "half a billion pounds of our money with no conditions at all". Crossings in the Channel have increased over the past three years, with 41,472 people arriving in the UK by small boat in 2025. This has prompted criticism that enforcement by French authorities has got worse.

While some UK politicians argue France should be doing more, its government has said police are intercepting boats at sea, aiming to stop them before migrants get onboard. On Saturday, 602 migrants arrived in Dover on nine boats, bringing the total number of arrivals so far in 2026 to more than 6,000.

Under the previous deal, which was signed in 2023, the UK paid £476m to France for extra patrols to disrupt migrant smuggling gangs. The arrangement, which saw around 700 law enforcement officers patrolling beaches in France, was expected to expire next month.

The Home Office said the number of officers sent to curb attempted journeys from northern France to Britain will rise by about 42% when the new agreement comes into force in the summer. It will involve nearly 1,100 law enforcement, intelligence and military officers in northern France, tasked with tracking down illegal migrants and stopping them boarding boats.

France will also supply a new vessel and more than 20 additional maritime officers to target so-called taxi boats. Some £501m will be spent on boosting enforcement action on beaches - with additional funding of £160m if the new tactics to curb crossings succeed. It is the latter amount that could be reduced after a year if there are not significant cuts to small boat crossings.

In the last two months, French authorities are said to have stopped six migrant boats. They returned all migrants to France and sentenced five smugglers to prison and deportation.

But the Conservatives and Reform have both said the UK needs to pull out of the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR) to stop the crossings. In response to the new deal, Chris Philp, Conservative MP and shadow home secretary, said: "The government's deal hands over half a billion pounds of our money with no conditions at all. France only prevented a third of embarkations last year and even let those illegal immigrants go to try again. France shouldn't get a single penny unless they stop the vast majority of the boats."

Speaking last month, Reform UK Treasury Spokesperson Robert Jenrick said the UK needed "a sovereign deterrent", and called for the government to "detain and deport every single illegal migrant who comes into our country". The Liberal Democrats have said the only way to properly deter people from making the crossings is to permanently break the criminal gangs business model and agree a large-scale returns agreement with France.

The Refugee Council argued the focus should not be on policing the Channel but on vulnerable people looking for safety. Imran Hussain, the council's director of external affairs, said: "Policing alone will not prevent desperate people from turning to dangerous small boats in the first place."

In August 2025, the Labour government signed a separate "one-in-one-out" deal with France, which allows the UK to return some small boat arrivals to France while admitting an equivalent number of migrants from France who have not attempted to come to the UK.

Worauf zu achten ist

KI-Ausblick — Möglichkeiten, keine Fakten

  • UK government will face continued pressure from Conservative and Reform UK to withdraw from ECHR

    Wahrscheinlich · Innerhalb von Monaten

  • French authorities will increase beach patrols and intercept attempts over summer months

    Sehr wahrscheinlich · Innerhalb von Wochen

  • Performance review of French effectiveness will occur after one year with potential funding adjustment

    Sicher · Innerhalb von Monaten

Offene Fragen

  • Will the performance-based funding mechanism actually be enforced?
  • How will French authorities respond to criticism from UK politicians?
  • What alternative routes might migrants use if Channel crossings are reduced?

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This article was originally published by BBC News.

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