
More than 500 people crossed Channel on Friday
On Tuesday, the tally passed 20,000, the earliest point in the calendar year the figure has been reached since data was first collected in 2018, as ministers struggle with their pledge to 'smash the gangs' of people-smugglers who facilitate the journeys.
It comes after reports on Friday that French police officers had used knives to puncture a boat off the French coast.
The Government has repeatedly pushed for French authorities to do more to prevent boats leaving the shore, including changing existing rules to allow police officers to intervene when dinghies are in the water.
Those changes have not yet come into effect, but reports on Friday suggested tougher action was already being taken.
Home Secretary Yvette Cooper pledged to crack down on the gangs (Stefan Rousseau/PA)
Meanwhile, the Home Secretary Yvette Cooper has announced a 'crackdown' on immigration enforcement targeting illegal working in the gig economy.
Officers will carry out checks in hotspots across the country where they suspect asylum seekers are working as delivery riders without permission.
It comes after Deliveroo, Uber Eats and Just Eat said they would ramp up facial verification and fraud checks over the coming months after conversations with ministers.
Ms Cooper said: 'Illegal working undermines honest business and undercuts local wages. The British public will not stand for it, and neither will this Government.
'Often those travelling to the UK illegally are sold a lie by the people-smuggling gangs that they will be able to live and work freely in this country, when in reality they end up facing squalid living conditions, minimal pay and inhumane working hours.
'We are surging enforcement action against this pull factor, on top of returning 30,000 people with no right to be here and tightening the law through our plan for change.'

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Scottish Sun
an hour ago
- Scottish Sun
Home Secretary pledges blitz on delivery riders working illegally as she joins immigration officers on frontline raids
THE Home Secretary has vowed to ramp up the arrests of illegal workers - as she joined teams on the frontline of Britain's immigration crackdown. Yvette Cooper teamed up with officers as they swooped on a Kent travellers' site targeting migrants suspected of working illegally as delivery riders. 2 Home Secretary Yvette Cooper Credit: Alamy 2 Deliveroo rider Credit: alamy But the suspects gave her the slip - with officers arriving to find they had already moved on. It comes as ministers ramp up a nationwide crackdown on gig economy abuse after The Sun exposed how migrants are working illegally as delivery riders while claiming taxpayer-funded support. Immigration Enforcement teams are now preparing to launch a fresh blitz across known hotspots, focusing on migrants suspected of working while living in free accommodation or receiving financial help. The law already allows asylum seekers to lose taxpayer-funded housing or payments if they are caught working illegally. But Ms Cooper will introduce new powers to toughen the rules and make it easier to cut off support when migrants abuse the system. The Government's new Border Security, Asylum and Immigration Bill will also force gig economy giants like Deliveroo, Uber Eats and Just Eat to carry out proper right-to-work checks on every rider to close loopholes and stop abuse. Ms Cooper told The Sun: 'These raids are part of a new intensive focus on the illegal working with delivery drivers and delivery riders, which is just a shocking abuse that is taking place, and we are determined to make sure that those rules are properly enforced.' Earlier this week, 20 Indian nationals were arrested in London during a raid on suspected cash-in-hand builders using illegally modified e-bikes. Further operations in the West Midlands and East of England have led to dozens more arrests in recent weeks. Director of Enforcement, Compliance and Crime, Eddy Montgomery, also said: "This next step of co-ordinated activity will target those who seek to work illegally in the gig economy and exploit their status in the UK. 'That means if you are found to be working with no legal right to do so, we will bring the full force of powers available to us to disrupt and stop this abuse. "There will no place to hide.'


Glasgow Times
an hour ago
- Glasgow Times
Family hubs to be rolled out across every council in England
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South Wales Guardian
2 hours ago
- South Wales Guardian
Conservatives will look to amend Government welfare Bill
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