logo
Here's how it could become harder for people-smugglers to reach the UK

Here's how it could become harder for people-smugglers to reach the UK

Metro2 days ago
Sir Keir Starmer will unveil the latest element in his plan to tackle illegal migration to the UK by working more closely with Europe this afternoon.
After announcing a 'one in, one out' policy with French President Emmanuel Macron last Thursday, today it's the turn of German Chancellor Friedrich Merz.
He has come to London for talks with the Prime Minister about closer alliance on issues like defence – and tying up a big loophole exploited by people-smugglers.
In Germany, there is currently no law that criminalises the aiding of people-smuggling.
That has allowed gangs who organise hazardous trips across the English Channel in small boats to hide their equipment in German warehouses as they make their way across the continent.
Last year, Home Secretary Yvette Cooper came close to a deal with the previous government led by Olaf Scholz.
Craig Munro breaks down Westminster chaos into easy to follow insight, walking you through what the latest policies mean to you. Sent every Wednesday. Sign up here.
But after Scholz was shunted out in a no-confidence vote and lost the subsequent election, she was left having to forge an agreement with the new administration under Merz.
Those talks have resulted in today's announcement that it will become a criminal offence in Germany to facilitate illegal migration to the UK.
The law change is expected to be adopted by the end of the year, according to the British government.
Starmer said: 'Chancellor Merz's commitment to make necessary changes to German law to disrupt the supply lines of the dangerous vessels which carry illegal migrants across the Channel is hugely welcome.'
Last Thursday, the PM stood alongside France's Emmanuel Macron at a press conference to announce a new strategy aiming to stop illegal migrants wanting to come to the UK.
The so-called 'one in, one out' system would mean people who cross the Channel in small boats are sent back to the continent in exchange for asylum seekers with genuine British links.
While this would initially mean no change in the number of people arriving in the UK, it's hoped migrants would be deterred from making the trip if they think there's a chance they won't get to stay.
To view this video please enable JavaScript, and consider upgrading to a web browser that supports HTML5 video
However, reports suggest the plans would start small.
According to French newspaper Le Monde, around 50 migrants a week would be swapped at first – meaning only a fraction of small boat arrivals would be sent back under the deal. More Trending
The government denied there were fixed numbers for the early stages of the scheme, but Starmer said the scope would 'ramp up' following the pilot.
More than 21,000 people have crossed the English Channel in small boats from France so far in 2025, the highest number ever for this point in the year.
Last week, Macron called for the UK to address incentives for people to attempt crossings, such as the availability of jobs for those who have arrived illegally.
The Home Office has announced an extension of Right to Work checks to gig economy and zero-hours workers, as well as a boost in action by Immigration Enforcement teams.
Get in touch with our news team by emailing us at webnews@metro.co.uk.
For more stories like this, check our news page.
MORE: Why was a superinjunction put on the Afghan evacuation story and what did it do?
MORE: Which four Labour MPs have been suspended and why?
MORE: What changes in ISAs could mean for you and where you should invest
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

France is ditching bank holidays and so should we
France is ditching bank holidays and so should we

Telegraph

timean hour ago

  • Telegraph

France is ditching bank holidays and so should we

Our Gallic neighbours have instructed us in the ways of many things. I'm thinking particularly of white Burgundy, champagne, béchamel sauce, mistresses and surrendering. More recently the UK's political leadership has taken on President Macron's habit of hugging everyone. Thus Sir Keir Starmer can't see the likes of President Zelensky across a crowded room without clambering over a sea of suits to give the guy a hug. And last week Sir Keir was with Europe's great hugger-in-chief and thus enveloping 47-year-old Emmanuel Jean-Michel Frédéric in his arms. But here's another thing: as bold as Dijon mustard, as sensible as the line judges at Roland-Garros and as perky as garlic, it has just been announced by the French Prime Minister François Bayrou. He's ditching two bank holidays. 'The entire nation has to work more,' he said this week, adding, 'so that the activity of the country as a whole increases and so that France's situation improves.' Bayrou's plan comes as he attempts to lower the country's spiralling public deficit and debt and, in next year's budget, save €43.8 billion. His plan is, he says, the 'last stop before the cliff edge'. And sounding more like Idi Amin, the Ugandan president of the 1970s, than a centrist European politician of the 2020s, he is insistent that, 'everyone will have to contribute to the effort'. The immediate practical problem, aside from the cacophony that is the sound of 68 million grumbling frogs, is which days to scrap. France has 11 national holidays and Bayrou has suggested scrapping Easter Monday (fair enough in a nation of croissant-munching atheists – only 5 per cent attend Mass on Sundays) and May 8, which is Victory Day. The latter should logically be renamed Surrender Day, occurs on June 22 (the date in 1940 of the Armistice) and on which the nation should definitely be put to work. The plan may sound harsh, particularly for a people famed for their love of leisure – most people take a month off in summer, they must work a maximum of 35 hours a week, lunch for a minimum of an hour and can dwell over a coffee long after it has gone cold. And indeed politicians, left and right, were spitting out their vins de table in rages this week. '[It's] a direct attack on our history, our roots and on working France,' said Jordan Bardella of the far-Right National Rally. Fabien Roussel of the French Communist party described it as 'an organised hold-up'. But hang on, it's actually a fabulous idea. And one that we should embrace as firmly as a Starmer/Macron hug. The UK has eight bank holidays. There's Christmas Day, Boxing Day, New Year's Day, Good Friday, Easter Monday and then a load of early summer ones that charge at you out of the blue normally when a heatwave has come and gone and it starts to rain and a random one at the end of August that enables people at the tail end of the Notting Hill Carnival to smoke cannabis in the street without impunity before a few stabbings at dusk. And they are now – in concept and practice – out of date and a contributor to national decline. And, before you squeal about the idea of my tearing apart a cornerstone of Britain's cultural history, they are relatively new. It was 1871 that an Act of Parliament was passed officially designating a number of days that workers should have off and on which banks would be closed. The man behind the Bank Holidays Act was the liberal reforming MP Sir John Lubbock who believed that religious holidays should be formalised. There was otherwise no way to ensure that a factory worker wasn't forced to toil, in gruelling conditions, for six days a week. The 'St Lubbock's Days', as they were called for a while, reflected the shift in Victorian England to more formalised leisure. But that was then. More than 150 years later and Britain dwells in a state of lugubrious idleness at which Lubbock himself would raise an eyebrow. Indeed post-Covid, most of the UK enjoys a four-day jolly every weekend. Offices are lucky if workers deign to join them Tuesday to Thursday and they can only tempt them in by offering free cereal, table tennis, comfy sofas in so many break-out areas, a drinks trolley on a Thursday afternoon (non-alcs catered for so as not to offend the Gen Zs) and a promise not to send the poor lambs too many emails on a Monday or Friday. Because the end of the week is firmly the beginning of the weekend and Monday is a recovery day and who wants to get on a horrid train when you can Zoom from home in your jim-jams. Our work patterns are also considerably less Victorian. Almost 7.5 million people now freelance – full- or part-time – and bank holidays lurk around the corner for them as pestilent days of childcare and lost revenue. Each bank holiday costs the nation some £2.4 billion in economic output so while politicians publicly support occasional additions such as that for King Charles's coronation in 2023, privately they shudder at the damage it does to the nation's books. And they are patently not 'bank' holidays of course, because nowadays you can bank online 24 hours a day. Furthermore, most high street banks are now upscale bars and people only wander into the remaining banks by mistake when they're drunk. Bank holidays are no longer precious, quiet days, and they are conspicuously not religious. The only notable religion featuring being that of unabashed consumerism. That France is enacting this policy while, according to the Office for National Statistics, actually being more productive than us should shame us into working more. So let's scrap two of them, the random May one and the August one, the extra days worked can merit a proportionate pay rise and hospitality need not grumble because, with more money in one's pocket, we can all afford to nip to the pub after work.

Ghislaine Maxwell's brother fears she will be KILLED in jail ‘like Epstein'… as he vows to free sex trafficker sister
Ghislaine Maxwell's brother fears she will be KILLED in jail ‘like Epstein'… as he vows to free sex trafficker sister

Scottish Sun

time3 hours ago

  • Scottish Sun

Ghislaine Maxwell's brother fears she will be KILLED in jail ‘like Epstein'… as he vows to free sex trafficker sister

Click to share on X/Twitter (Opens in new window) Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) GHISLAINE Maxwell's brother is afraid she will be killed in prison "like Jeffrey Epstein". Ian Maxwell, 68, is hoping to get his convicted sex trafficker sister out of jail using new evidence. 6 Ghislaine Maxwell (in black) pictured with her brother Ian (right) and her parents Robert and Elisabeth in 1990 Credit: Bridgeman Images 6 Ian Maxwell fears his sister will be killed in prison Credit: AP 6 The disgraced British socialite Ghislaine Maxwell posing with husband Jeffrey Epstein Credit: PA Ian said he fears for her life behind bars in Tallahassee's federal prison, and warned she's no longer safe inside the overcrowded facility. Worried about her every day, he told the Daily Mail: 'There's such overcrowding in Tallahassee that higher-category prisoners are being placed there and it's becoming a facility that is more dangerous – we've got to get her out of there. 'Normally she spends a lot of time in the prison library helping other prisoners with things like form filling, but she has to go from A to B and isn't always surrounded by guards. 'It's a possibility someone might get to her. I don't want to be dramatic but you can't discount it. Look what happened to Epstein.' Maxwell, 63, is currently serving a 20-year sentence after being convicted in 2021 of helping Epstein lure underage girls into a web of abuse stretching back to the 1990s. During her three-week trial in 2021, jurors heard prosecutors describe Maxwell as "dangerous". While her legal appeals have been thrown out by multiple courts, Ian insists the fight is far from over to get the disgraced British socialite out. The brother revealed her legal team is plotting a last-ditch effort involving new evidence and an explosive habeas corpus filing. He admitted hopes that the US Supreme Court will hear her case are slim. Trump blasts 'are we still talking about this creep-' over Epstein as mystery swirls around 'missing CCTV & client list' 'It's not a done deal,' he said. 'About 10,000 petitions are lodged each year and they only hear 200 to 250 cases.' But if that fails, the family says they'll take another legal route. 'If they don't hear Ghislaine's case… we will go another route and file a writ of habeas corpus which allows a prisoner to challenge their imprisonment on the basis of new evidence, such as government misconduct.' The family have long argued Maxwell was made a scapegoat for Epstein's crimes and treated harshly to satisfy public outrage after the convicted paedophile died in his cell in 2019. 'I fully believe my sister is innocent and that she will be released some day in the future,' Ian said. The Maxwell family has consistently claimed she was denied a fair trial. And now they're reportedly banking on a controversial 2007 agreement Epstein struck with the Department of Justice to shield his co-conspirators from prosecution. In a recent statement, the family said: 'Our sister Ghislaine did not receive a fair trial. 'Her legal team continues to fight her case in the courts and will file its reply in short order to the government's opposition in the US Supreme Court. 'If necessary, in due course they will also file a writ of habeas corpus in the U.S. District Court, SDNY. 'This allows her to challenge her imprisonment based on new evidence, such as government misconduct that would have likely changed the trial's outcome.' 6 Maxwell, 63, was convicted in 2021 of helping Epstein lure underage girls into a web of abuse Credit: AFP 6 Convicted paedophile Epstein died in prison in 2019 Credit: Rex Judges have already rejected the defence team's claim that she "should never have been prosecuted" because of the "weird" 2007 plea deal, but the family appears undeterred. It also comes amid reports that Maxwell is pursuing a pardon from Donald Trump, following the closure of the US probe into Epstein's death and financial dealings. A source close to Maxwell exclusively told The Sun on Sunday there's a 'window of momentum' in her favor. The insider said: 'Those close to her believe it's unfair that she alone is paying for Epstein's crimes and call into question much of the evidence against her. 'Now her legal team feel as if they have a rare window of momentum so they are set to take up her case with the President.' Meanwhile, renewed political pressure is mounting over the unresolved mysteries surrounding Epstein's sick empire. Democratic Senator Ron Wyden has claimed a 'big' Epstein file 'full of actionable information' is gathering dust in the Treasury Department — information that could shine more light on the financier's global sex trafficking network. 'Somewhere in the Treasury Department… locked away in a cabinet drawer, is a big Epstein file that's full of actionable information,' Wyden said on the Senate floor. He has urged federal authorities to investigate nearly $1.1 billion in suspicious wire transfers linked to Epstein, as well as his connections to Russian banks and the trafficking of women from Eastern Europe. Although the Biden administration has dismissed claims of hidden records as 'fantasies' and 'political theatre,' calls for transparency around Epstein's finances and ties to powerful individuals continue to grow.

Plan to humiliate Donald Trump during UK visit raises £10,000 in a day
Plan to humiliate Donald Trump during UK visit raises £10,000 in a day

Daily Mirror

time3 hours ago

  • Daily Mirror

Plan to humiliate Donald Trump during UK visit raises £10,000 in a day

Campaigners plan to plaster Britain with embarrassing posters of Donald Trump - while Lib Dem leader Sir Ed Davey says he "has a nerve" to come here at all Campaigners planning to plaster Britain with embarrassing posters of Donald Trump in time for his visit to Scotland have raised £10,000 in donations. ‌ And Lib Dem leader Sir Ed Davey said the US President 'has a nerve' to come to the UK after his 'hokey cokey' approach to steel tariffs left UK manufacturing in limbo. ‌ Trump is set to travel to Scotland on Wednesday, and will visit his two golf courses during the trip. ‌ And Keir Starmer is expected to meet with the US President during the visit. 'Trump has nerve coming over to the UK when he's spent the last year playing tariff hokey-cokey with the British economy,' The Lib Dem leader told the Sunday Mirror. 'But in fairness, he can do less damage on a golf course than in the White House. ‌ 'His back of the envelope tariff 'plan' is hitting steelworkers hard across the country — and with nothing yet to show for the deal he signed with the Prime Minister, there's no end in sight for their worries.' When Trump last visited the UK in 2019, as many as 250,000 protesters lined the streets jeering and booing as he drove past in his presidential limousine, The Beast. Banners were unfurled by protesters bearing messages including 'No-one Likes You', 'Trump=Wasteman' and 'No Human Is Illegal'. And a giant blimp depicting Trump as a giant baby wearing a nappy floated over London during his visit. And on Thursday a huge poster of Trump with dead paedophile Jeffrey Epstein appeared on a bus stop near the US Embassy. It was the work of campaign group Everyone Hates Elon - who intend to plaster the UK with the embarrassing snap during Trump's visit, in what it describes as an 'act of public service.' ‌ 'In less than 24 hours we've hit our first target of £10,000 to make sure the photo of trump with Epstein follows him all over the UK, and now we're going to aim higher,' a spokesperson told the Mirror. Organisers say for every £15 raised they'll add another square metre to a huge banner of the image. "The Jeffrey Epstein files are tearing apart Trump's MAGA movement right now with even loyal supporters up in arms. So help us to expose Trump's crimes, while also fuelling the end of his hateful movement. In just a few weeks we can give him a welcome he'll never forget.'

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