logo
French cops FINALLY drag small boat packed with migrants back to shore… with BBC crew conveniently on hand to film it

French cops FINALLY drag small boat packed with migrants back to shore… with BBC crew conveniently on hand to film it

Scottish Sun2 days ago
FRENCH cops have finally been captured tackling small boats in the water… while a BBC camera crew were conveniently on hand to film it.
For months, the officers across the Channel have been slammed for refusing to get their feet wet and watching on as dinghies packed with migrants leave their shores.
Advertisement
6
The cops were spotted using knives to slash the boats
Credit: BBC
6
French officers have repeatedly faced criticism for refusing to get their feet wet
Credit: BBC
6
Young men attempting to cross the Channel watched on as their boat was slashed
Credit: BBC
6
Last month, French boarder guards were pictured standing on a beach taking pictures as yet another boat-load of migrants set sale
Credit: PA
Critics say that £500million of taxpayer cash given to France has only turned its beaches into 'the world's most expensive sieve'.
It was widely reported last month that the French were stopping a record low number of migrants from crossing, intercepting fewer than 40 per cent of people.
Last month, French boarder guards were pictured standing on a beach taking pictures as yet another boat-load of migrants set sale.
Patrols with jeeps, quad bikes and drones were pictured on the sand earlier this week - but smugglers still managed to launch more dinghies.
Advertisement
In chaotic scenes today - with a BBC camera crew on hand to film - officers finally appeared to intervene and slashed the boats with knives.
With a reporter and cameras on hand to film the action at Boulogne-Sur-Mer this morning, cops were whipped into action.
The officers are first seen arming themselves with the knives as they arrive on the beach in buggies - paid for by the UK - before the camera cuts to them slicing the side of the boat.
Migrants and smugglers can be heard screaming and shouting at the officers as as the rubber dinghy begins to sink.
Advertisement
They have repeatedly claimed that entering the water is legally complex and too dangerous for the migrants.
The number of arrivals to the UK has hit a record 20,000 since the start of the year.
On Monday alone, 879 reached British shores, the third biggest daily total in 2025.
Sir Keir Starmer has faced pressure to deliver on his promise to 'smash the gangs', fuelling the crisis.
Advertisement
French cops handed millions in UK taxpayer-funded gear are still failing to stop boat crossings
The Prime Minister and French President Emmanuel Macron are due to meet in London next week for a State visit and a summit focused on tackling the crossings.
The UK first signed a deal with France under the last Tory government, with nearly £500million committed to extra patrols, surveillance drones, vehicles and riot vans.
Reform UK leader Nigel Farage said: 'Record numbers of young undocumented males have crossed this year thanks to French beaches being the world's most expensive sieve — this is a disaster for the country.
'They are costing us money, making us less safe, and they bring a terrorist threat.
Advertisement
'This will only get worse under the weakest Prime Minister I have ever seen.'
The leaders are also preparing to unveil a new 'one in, one out' migrant returns deal — sending some Channel arrivals to France in exchange for Britain accepting migrants with family reunion rights.
But the Tories have branded the plan a 'fantasy' and demanded their Rwanda scheme be reinstated.
Shadow Home Secretary Chris Philp said: 'One year into Labour's government and the boats haven't stopped, they've multiplied.
Advertisement
'It's become a free-for-all.
'We need a removals deterrent so every single illegal immigrant who arrives is removed outside Europe.
'The crossings will then rapidly stop.'
The PM's spokesman said the ­figures were 'clearly unacceptable'.
Advertisement
They added: 'But let's be clear, gangs have been allowed to embed industrial-scale smuggling enterprises across Europe, whilst our own ­asylum system collapsed through failed policies like Rwanda.
'But we are taking action.'
The spokesman pointed to arrests of gang leaders, thousands of boat seizures, and closer ties with France.
The Ministry of Justice confirmed legal aid fees for immigration and asylum cases will rise by 30 per cent, marking the first increase in almost three decades.
Advertisement
6
Sir Keir Starmer has faced pressure to deliver on his promise to 'smash the gangs'
Credit: BBC
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Why this Jew is tired of London
Why this Jew is tired of London

Spectator

time31 minutes ago

  • Spectator

Why this Jew is tired of London

I was born in London. It's where I built my life. It's where I have core memories, good friends, a bike, a gym, my local shops. London is my home. But I no longer feel at home, so I've decided to stay away. My parents emigrated in the 70s. And though I'm ethnically Jewish, I very much see myself as British. I am a beneficiary – and a custodian – of the values which gave my parents the opportunity to thrive in the United Kingdom. Values like equal opportunity, fair play, community, tolerance, freedom of religion and of expression. For the first half of my life, I took these for granted. Eventually, I came to appreciate them; then to cherish them; and in recent years, I find myself regularly defending them. And though in my childhood I had faced some discrimination, I never felt anything but belonging in the country that I've called home for more than 30 years. But apparently belonging isn't indestructible. Brick by brick, my life in London is being undone. If there had been tremors before, October 7th 2023 was an earthquake. The first brick fell on that fateful Saturday morning, when terrorists, propelled by religious fanaticism, rampaged through villages and a music festival in southern Israel, murdering my peers, obliterating entire families, kidnapping hundreds more. That very morning, a journalist at an influential left-wing outlet described it as 'a day of celebration for supporters of democracy and human rights worldwide'. 'The struggle for freedom is rarely bloodless and we shouldn't apologise for it,' she wrote. Those words were written even as videos were pouring out of young women being dragged into Gaza by screaming men. A few days later, our own extremists celebrated on the streets of London, rejoicing in the massacres. Every day since, there have been further painful blows. From the weekly hate-marches (and yes, it felt pretty hateful when one man made a throat-slitting gesture at me, or when another lady told me to 'go back to Europe' – I wonder if she knows that neither Yemen nor Iraq, where my family originate, is in Europe), to the defaced hostage posters across the city, to a well-known queer nightclub advertising 'no fucking Zionists, this is not your space', to friends of mine being more outraged about Greta Thunberg being 'abducted' than they were when 250 people were actually abducted on October 7th, to the beloved Dawn French appearing to refer to the worst day in many of our lives as a 'bad fing'. Each of these instances, and the myriad others, have made me wonder how much my sense of belonging truly holds. And then something fascinating happened. I came to Israel to visit family and to enjoy Tel Aviv Pride, and the unexpected yet unsurprising war with Iran began. I found myself 'stuck' in Israel. With the airspace closed and all flights grounded, I, like everyone else here, received regular sirens on my phone, warning that missiles were on their way from Iran and that we should take cover. Deep within the bomb shelters, with the missiles falling around us, and explosions heard above us – and with the building literally shaking – a friend turned to me and said '…still feels safer than London'. To my horror, I agreed. Despite the missiles, the destruction, and the tragic fatalities, there is an unshakable sense of hope here. When I walk across the square in Tel Aviv, I hear people singing songs of peace, instead of the chants for 'Intifada, Revolution' that I hear at Waterloo station. On the lampposts, I see signs in Hebrew and Arabic of brotherhood and unity, rather than 'ZioNazi' graffiti in my local London park. Even as I write these words, I can't shake the feeling that I don't want to come back to the city where I was born, where I grew up, and which I still call home. Watching a sea of my peers chant 'death to the IDF' at Glastonbury last weekend was the final straw. Twelve hundred people were murdered on October 7th. But something else died that day. For almost two years I wasn't sure what it was. I hadn't been able to put my finger it. Almost every single Jewish person I've spoken to, whether British or otherwise, has felt the same thing. Something has changed. And so, I must change. I've decided not to rush back to London. I will spend more of my time here. I have Jewish and Israeli friends in London who refuse to budge. 'We won't be chased away,' they say, 'We won't let them win'. I respect that. And though, in some ways, it feels like giving up, I just can't do it anymore. I refuse to remain surrounded by apathy at best, or outright hostility at worst. Why would I? I love you London. You've given me so much. But you've broken my heart. And, like in many complicated relationships, I think we need to take a break. So, it's not goodbye, full stop. But it is goodbye, for now. I'll keep doing whatever I can to support and defend my home, the UK, and our values, from here in the Middle East – where the cockroaches fly, the road rage is palpable, and threat of war is imminent. But here, at least, my heart is full.

Glastonbury row: Feeble BBC bow to Starmer's new authoritarianism
Glastonbury row: Feeble BBC bow to Starmer's new authoritarianism

The National

timean hour ago

  • The National

Glastonbury row: Feeble BBC bow to Starmer's new authoritarianism

Two points: various people were ­delighted at the chance to take a pop at the Beeb ­(hello, Kemi Badenoch and co) while the chief rabbi must be aware that the IDF are not about to attract a good conduct medal from the public at large any time soon. You might think that the most senior Jewish cleric in the land could distinguish between hostility to the current Israeli ­administration and antisemitism towards Jewry generally. Though he believes that one might well lead to the other. Most of the public don't share that view, but they do think it's long past time the UK Government took a stronger line with the Israeli premier and those of his ­Cabinet who are long-standing critics of Palestinian rights. And vocally encourage attacks by ­illegal settlers on the indigenous ­population. Of course, calling for any death from a ­public stage is a lot less than clever, as ­Kneecap found out. As it happened, it was another act which occasioned much ­frothing at the mouth and led to calls for senior BBC executives to fall on their swords. READ MORE: Reform UK MP suspends himself from party over '£70k Covid loans' A sense of proportion might be in ­order though, and anyone who caught the ­Channel Four broadcast of a documentary, originally commissioned but not screened by the BBC, must have been appalled at the treatment of health teams – including senior medics – by the Israeli Defence Force. As for pausing anything anybody might find offensive, how does that impact on live-streaming of events on TV? Do you ­follow up by confiscating T-shirts bearing messaging of which you don't approve? We're not yet in the business of aping Trumpland, inasmuch as we don't allow brown skinned Brits to be hauled off the streets by masked Home Office operatives. But that department has taken to ­boasting about deportation numbers, which is a strange way to treat folks who risked life and limb to reach our shores. On Friday morning, the Home Secretary told a radio audience that if there were to be a death on board an overcrowded craft, all the travellers would be deemed guilty. Including, it seems, the relations of the ­deceased. But few things mark a change in the UK Government's culture like the attitude to protest, which once had a long and ­noble history allowing dissent from policy ­without being hounded and/or chucked in the pokey. Doubtless the protesters who broke into the Brize Norton airbase and threw red paint at planes and their engines might be thought guilty of criminal damage. As might the chap with wire cutters at a similar base once defended by one Keir Starmer KC over 20 years ago, though no doubt he would argue that the cab rank principle of selecting briefs gave him little choice. Then there were the draconian ­sentences handed out to the Stop Oil protesters, mitigated only slightly by the judge who deemed the originals handed down were over the top. If you think ­climate change is the greatest danger ­facing our planet and its inhabitants (and I do), then I suspect those jailed for that particular protest will ultimately gain martyr status. Similarly, the couple who threw oil ­at the Van Gogh painting – protected like most iconic images by glass – seem to me to be primarily guilty of selecting a ­target they knew would attract maximum ­opprobrium and, not at all incidentally, major headlines in every publication. That, after all, is the hallmark of ­successful protest – not much publicity in throwing paint at high-profile paintings after hours. Some of you will recall the massive ­protests over the poll tax – never called the community charge except by the Lady Thatcher – which charged the rich man in his castle precisely the same as the poor man at his gate. John Major binned it when he took ­office, though I remain unpersuaded that the successor Council Tax is a fair ­substitute. The public outrage at the manifestly ­unfair poll tax did effect policy change, but also led to the controversial police tactic of 'kettling' protesters. The appalling Donald Trump has set his face against anything smacking of ­greenery, of course, and persists in ­believing that climate change and those who are scared of it are merely bowing down before mythology rather than hard, scientifically proven fact. You will recall that one of his favourite rally mantras is 'drill baby drill', while he attributed Californian wildfires to the failure to sweep up forest debris. READ MORE: Youth Demand activists stage Gaza protest at London Pride Just wait till the flames are lapping around Mar-a-Lago, the tacky leisure club run by El Presidente, and we'll be treated to the thought that the fires were all started by the Commies and the ­'radical left' as he hilariously terms his predecessor. He has just overseen the construction of a hostile prison facility located in Florida – cheerily named Alligator Alcatraz – since anyone trying to escape will meet up with some of the more hostile residents of the area. Local law enforcement ­officers stuck ICE (Immigration and Customs ­Enforcement) hats on some of the 'gators and crocodiles presumably to underscore the risks. How we didn't laugh. Apparently, these facilities (another is being built) cost around half a million ­dollars a year to run – or peanuts to a man who has just orchestrated a bill which will add trillions to the annual US budget. If even Elon Musk thinks this foolhardy, it might give a more sentient being pause for thought. Some of that money will go to building more prisons and blocking off the border – some will go to tax cuts for the wealthy, paid for by slashing medical and food aid for the poor. Just think of the president as a sort of reverse Robin Hood – robbing the poor to give to the rich. BUT you do wonder what exactly is happening round the UK Cabinet table. Have all those ministers and secretaries of state elected on a Labour ticket suddenly become right-wing zealots? It was instructive to see that the ­normally super loyal chairs of selected committees were prominent in ­drawing up the wrecking amendment which holed Starmer's welfare 'reform' below the water line. No way can you describe that size of protest and outright rebellion as down to the usual suspects. We are not yet at the point where we jail people for allegedly disrespecting the Islamic prophet Muhammad as they have just done in Turkey. And it's a fair wee while since the law of blasphemy was turfed out in the UK (though alarmingly later in Scotland as a by-product of the hate speech law). It was way back in 1988 that a fatwa was decreed against Salman Rushdie and a call went out for his death when some Muslims took issue with his book on the Satanic Verses. However, some people have very long memories and Rushdie's fatwa was still in place when he was ­brutally stabbed just three years ago. More than 60,000 Christians were ­offended at Jerry Springer: The Opera, when the BBC screened it in 2005. (They were braver then!) Christian Voice tried to sue the corporation for blasphemy, ­alleging that the portrayal of Jesus as 'a bit gay' was highly offensive. The courts disagreed and suggested that stage productions were immune from a law which, in any event, the Lord ­Denning had previously decreed was a dead letter. Quite right too.

Keir Starmer told not to 'punish' children by keeping two-child cap
Keir Starmer told not to 'punish' children by keeping two-child cap

The National

timean hour ago

  • The National

Keir Starmer told not to 'punish' children by keeping two-child cap

The SNP urged the Prime Minister to end the limit amid reports it could stay as a result of Labour watering down most of its welfare reforms. KEIR Starmer has been urged not to 'punish' children by keeping the two-child cap following Labour's partial U-turn on benefit cuts. The UK Government had attempted to save around £5 billion a year by cutting welfare, mostly for those claiming disability and health benefits, but made concessions following a revolt from MPs. READ MORE: At least 42 Palestinians killed by Israel as doctors warn babies facing death The move means the Treasury may not see any savings at all as the welfare budget is still set to rapidly rise in the coming years. Media reports suggest the move could see ministers keep the cap in order to save money. The Prime Minister previously indicated the Government would only abolish the two-child cap, which prevents parents from claiming child tax credit or universal credit for more than two children, when it had the money to do so. Asked in May whether he would scrap the policy, he said: 'We'll look at all options of driving down child poverty.' The SNP, which will mitigate the limit in Scotland by 2026, has urged the UK Government to scrap the cap, which it says is pushing thousands of children into poverty. The party said analysis from the House of Commons Library found that 2.3 million families could be lifted out of poverty if the UK Government matched Scottish Government policies. These included the Scottish Child Payment, abolishing the two-child benefit cap and scrapping the so-called bedroom tax. According to the House of Commons Library, these measures would lift 96,000 families in Scotland out of poverty. The analysis also shows that over the past decade the number of children living in poverty in the UK has risen from 3.7 million (27%) in 2013/14 to 4.5 million (31%) in 2023/24. That number is expected to rise to 4.6 million (33%) by 2029-30, according to the data. SNP deputy Westminster leader Pete Wishart urged the Prime Minister to have a rethink on his welfare plans. Pete Wishart MP (Image: PA) He said: 'Keir Starmer must not punish children for his disastrous mistakes over the Labour Party's cuts to disabled people. 'It is utterly shameful that as a direct result of Labour Party austerity cuts, child poverty is rising to record levels in the UK – and the Prime Minister is failing to lift a finger to tackle it. 'Scrapping the two-child benefit cap is the absolute bare minimum – and it should have been done on the Labour Government's first day in power. READ MORE: Here's why banning Orange marches would be a bad idea 'It's pathetic that senior Labour Party figures now want to keep this punitive welfare cut just to show rebel MPs who's in charge. 'Saving Keir Starmer embarrassment is not more important than tackling child poverty.' Wishart urged Starmer not to 'drag his feet' on the two-child cap and to instead match the SNP's Scottish Child Payment with a similar policy for the entire UK. He added: 'Thanks to SNP action, Scotland is the only part of the UK where child poverty is falling. 'Unless Keir Starmer urgently follow's Scotland's lead, his lasting legacy will be pushing millions of children into destitution.' A UK Government spokesperson said: 'We are determined to bring down child poverty. We've just announced a new £1 billion package to reform crisis support, including funding to ensure the poorest children do not go hungry outside of term time. 'This comes alongside the expansion to free breakfast clubs and the move to make over half-a-million more children eligible for free school meals. 'We have also increased the national minimum wage and are supporting 700,000 of the poorest families by introducing a fair repayment rate on universal credit deductions. 'We will publish an ambitious child poverty strategy later this year to ensure we deliver fully funded measures that tackle the structural and root causes of child poverty across the country.'

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