logo
Members of people smuggling network sentenced over small boat crossing which left four dead

Members of people smuggling network sentenced over small boat crossing which left four dead

ITV News15 hours ago

Nine members of a people smuggling network have been sentenced over a small boat crossing which left four people dead and another four missing.
Seven Afghan nationals and two Iraqis were convicted of offences including involuntary manslaughter, endangering lives and facilitating illegal entry following a trial in Lille, northern France.
One of the men was tried in his absence after fleeing France before trial.
The judge handed the Afghan ringleader of the gang an eight-year jail term.
The others were sentenced to seven years each.
It followed a criminal investigation, supported by the National Crime Agency (NCA), into an incident on 14 December 2022, when a boat carrying 47 people got into trouble in the English Channel.
Four people were confirmed to have died and another four were never found.
The survivors were rescued by a British fishing vessel and brought to shore in Dover.
The NCA and Kent Police worked with the French authorities to identify those responsible for putting the boat in the water.
They provided crucial intelligence and evidence to French investigators including interviews with the survivors.
Senegalese national Ibrahima Bah, 20, was later convicted in the UK of piloting the boat.
His trial, at Canterbury Crown Court, heard how the 'death trap' dinghy was heavily overloaded, and only had space for around 20 people.
Many of those on board did not have life-jackets.
He was jailed for nine years in February 2024.
NCA Deputy Director Rick Jones said: "This was a tragic event which sadly demonstrated the extreme danger involved in putting overloaded boats into the sea.
"While our thoughts remain with the loved ones of those who died, I'm glad that those who organised this crossing have now been brought to justice.
"The gangs involved in this type of criminality have no concern for the welfare or safety of those they transport, they're just in it for the money.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

British man reported missing in Cambodia found in jail accused of drug smuggling
British man reported missing in Cambodia found in jail accused of drug smuggling

Metro

timean hour ago

  • Metro

British man reported missing in Cambodia found in jail accused of drug smuggling

A British man reported missing in Cambodia has been arrested there accused of trying to smuggle £200,000 of cannabis into the UK. Robert Brown, 41, from Newcastle, was reported missing by his girlfriend just hours before he was detained at Phnom Penh International Airport on June 17. He has been charged with the use, possession, trafficking, and transport of drugs after police found nearly 20kg of cannabis in 22 packages hidden inside his luggage. If convicted, he could face up to 30 years in prison. His arrest was announced by the capital's anti-drug department which posted a photo of him, with his face blurred, in custody. It said a British male aged 41 had been detained after police 'seized 22 pieces of dry marijuana, equivalent to 19 kg 902 grams'. Hours earlier, another post – since removed – was shared on social media in a group for expats in Cambodia, Mail Online reports. A user named 'Kasey Kasey' wrote: 'Missing in Cambodia. Goes by the name of Robert Brown, he's 40 years of age, Geordie lad, broad accent. 'Was meant to return to the UK today, but didn't board a plane and has left his luggage in the hotel room. 'Please share and hopefully he's found thanks. He was staying at the Old Durbar Hotel Restaurant.' A spokesperson for the foreign office said: 'We are supporting the family of a British man who was detained in Cambodia and are in contact with the local authorities.' The arrest is the latest in a series of incidents involving Brits abroad being detained on suspicion of drugs smuggling. Bella May Culley's is among the more high-profile cases. The 18-year-old from Billingham on Teesside, was reported missing in Thailand before it emerged she had been arrested at Tbilisi Airport in Georgia. More Trending The aspiring nurse, who is said to be pregnant, faces a maximum sentence of 20 years or life imprisonment in the post-Soviet country if she is convicted over a cannabis haul worth £200,000. Her case was followed by that of Charlotte May Lee, 21, who is currently in prison in Sri Lanka, also accused of trying to run the drug out of Thailand. Last month, a British couple were arrested in Spain after 32kg of cannabis was discovered in two suitcases. That same day, an electrician from Cumbria narrowly escaped a death sentence in Bali after initial drug trafficking charges against him were dropped, and instead replaced with hiding information from the authorities. Get in touch with our news team by emailing us at webnews@ For more stories like this, check our news page. MORE: Bryan Kohberger 'to plead guilty to murders of four Idaho students' in major twist MORE: Man dies after getting stuck in cereal plant oven MORE: Man, 92, found guilty of murdering pensioner in UK's longest-running cold case

Taxi driver from Kent ordered to pay back £100,000 he made from people smuggling or face jail
Taxi driver from Kent ordered to pay back £100,000 he made from people smuggling or face jail

ITV News

timean hour ago

  • ITV News

Taxi driver from Kent ordered to pay back £100,000 he made from people smuggling or face jail

A taxi driver from Kent has been ordered to pay back £100,000 he made from people smuggling or he could face jail. Habib Behsodi from Chatham ferried migrants who had been smuggled into the UK in the back of lorries up to the West Midlands, where the Vietnamese organised crime group he was working with were based. The 44-year-old was also invovled in taking payments from those who had been transported in. He was found guilty of conspiring to facilitate illegal immigration in December 2022. He was given a 20-month jail term, suspended for two years. Following his conviction financial investigators from the National Crime Agency began work to identify assets that could be proceeds of crime. At a hearing on Friday 27 June he was ordered to pay £100,000 or face an additional 12-month jail term. He has three months to hand over the money. NCA senior investigating officer Paul Boniface said: "Behsodi made this money from his criminality, so it is only right that he should not be able to benefit from it. "He played an important part in a people smuggling enterprise which saw migrants treated as a commodity to be profited from, transporting them from Vietnam to the UK. "This case demonstrates that not only will we investigate and bring to justice those involved in organised immigration crime, we will also follow the money and stop criminals profiting from their wrongdoing."

You'll need strong stomach for this hideously fascinating documentary
You'll need strong stomach for this hideously fascinating documentary

The Herald Scotland

time2 hours ago

  • The Herald Scotland

You'll need strong stomach for this hideously fascinating documentary

*** WHEN you walk in the first thing that hits you is the smell. Then the flies and maggots. This was Lauren Baker, one of the crime scene cleaners of the title, matter-of-factly describing her job. You need a strong stomach for this kind of work. Ditto watching a documentary about it. There have been a few programmes on the subject (plus the Greg Davies sitcom), such is the public's fascination with crime and gore. But rarely do they get as up close and stomach-churning as this ten-parter. Dividing its time between the US and UK, viewers were promised a look 'beyond the police tape'. In Kent, Lauren was dealing with 'an unattended death in a bungalow', a very British-sounding tragedy if ever there was one. The (decomposed) body had been removed, no foul play suspected, leaving Lauren and her team to clear and clean the place. A running commentary went through the various hazards and the nasty things they could do to anyone not covered head to foot in PPE. For Lauren, we were told, cleaning wasn't just physical. 'She also performs a ritual to cleanse the space spiritually'. This consisted of opening a window (a given, you might have thought) and saying 'go and be free'. One to file under W for 'Whatever gets you through the day', perhaps. Read more In Baton Rouge, Louisiana, the cleaners had their own home-grown scourge to deal with - fentanyl. Its microscopic particles get everywhere, including the lungs, so when a car came in with a bullet hole in the window and a strong suspicion that it had been used to run drugs, it was all hands to the cleaning sprays. Back in Kent, Lauren was piecing together the deceased's life from the things left behind. 'Something to do with Kent highways,' she thought. 'Everyone's got a story, haven't they?' Her story included starting her own business after a spell of bar work. She has made a success of it, bringing up a family on the way. Now she wouldn't trade the job for another in 'a million years'. Her late dad would have been proud, she says, justifiably. In Los Angeles there was a trail of blood to be followed. Not as bad as the one that was a mile long - that took a whole crew working through the night - but enough. Various talking heads, forensic specialist this and former cop that, walked viewers through the scene. Though some were experts in the bleedin' obvious - 'without blood you don't live' - a few made interesting points. The blood could not simply be sluiced away, for instance, or it would enter the water supply. The cleaners did a meticulous job; the places were transformed. Then it struck you: all this effort was being expended to sell the property on, or allow residents to move back in. Life went on. 'This will make a really lovely home for someone,' said Lauren. Irrational or not, it was a chilling thought.

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