France: rescue of 126 migrants trying to reach England

One hundred and twenty-six migrants, including several women and children, were rescued at sea on Friday in the Strait of Pas-de-Calais, in northern France, as they tried to reach England on board boats from fortune, maritime authorities said on Saturday.

A first boat, reported in difficulty off the port of Dunkirk, was carrying 43 people, including six women, two children and two babies, according to a press release from the Maritime Prefecture of the Channel and the North Sea (Premar).

They were recovered by a patroller of the French Navy, and taken care of by the firefighters, one of them being hypothermic, before being entrusted to the border police (PAF).

Forty migrants were also rescued in the channel of the port of Calais, and recovered by an intervention, assistance and rescue tug.

This same tug finally rescued 43 other castaways in difficulty off Dunkirk. They themselves had called for help to “ask for assistance”, specifies the Premar. All were brought back to the port of Dunkirk and entrusted to the PAF.

Since the end of 2018, illegal crossings of the Channel by migrants seeking to reach the United Kingdom have increased despite repeated warnings from the authorities highlighting the danger linked to the density of traffic, strong currents and low temperatures. some water.

According to the maritime prefect Philippe Dutrieux, some 15,400 migrants attempted the crossing between January 1 and August 31, of which 3,500 were “recovered in difficulty” in the strait and brought back to the French coast. In 2020, 9,500 people attempted the crossing, compared to 2,300 in 2019 and 600 in 2018.

In mid-August, the sinking of a boat caused the death of an Eritrean migrant. Last year, four members of an Iranian Kurdish family died and their one-year-old child was missing before being found, according to British media, several months later on the Norwegian coast.



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