Migrants walk from the sea after failing to board a small boat off the coast of Dunkirk(Image: PA)
Alp Mehmet, chairman of Migration Watch UK, added: “This is the cheapest crossings have ever been. It’s a shocking situation. And, with the conflict in Iran, it is undoubted that migrants fleeing the country will arrive by small boat in Britain as well.”
Evidence has been found on social media in chats between smugglers and has emerged in French court cases where prices are just £500. It is feared there will be a rise in crossings as the weather improves. On Thursday, two men and two women died after trying to board a dinghy off northern France.
A Sudanese man, 27, was arrested on suspicion of “endangering another during a journey by sea to the UK”, the National Crime Agency said. He was held at Manston processing centre in Kent. The victims were swept away by strong currents at around 7am, off Saint Etienne au Mont, near Calais.
It came after migrants were seen scrambling to board a small boat off the coast of Dunkirk. Two migrants died following an incident last week, while another person is missing.
In a separate case, two women and a man were burned when their small boat reportedly caught fire off the coast at Le Portel. A woman, 17, suffered burns all over her body and 77 people were rescued.
Migrants walk into the sea to board a small boat off the coast of France(Image: PA)
About 2,200 migrants crossed the Channel in the first two months of 2026. Around 41,500 people made the crossing in 2025, according to the University of Oxford’s Migration Observatory. The BSC suffered a blow last month when its chief Martin Hewitt resigned after just 18 months.
Small boat numbers rose while he was in the role but the former police chief previously expressed frustration at the time it was taking French authorities to help stop crossings. Labour introduced the Border Security, Asylum and Immigration Bill, which became law last December, to bolster Immigration Enforcement, police and NCA operations on smugglers. It is a crime to supply, offer to supply or handle articles such as small boat parts, with jail terms up to 14 years.
A Home Office spokesperson said: “This Government is bearing down on small boat crossings. We have prevented over 42,000 illegal crossing attempts since the election, delivered the largest migrant smuggling crackdown on record and introduced an offence that criminalises the online promotion of unlawful immigration services. We will continue working relentlessly to prevent these perilous journeys.”