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MIGRANT CRISIS

‘I saw them die’: Survivors recount migrant boat capsizing in Channel

Biniam Semay was on a boat carrying dozens of migrants across the Channel from France to England when the fragile vessel ripped apart, leaving his younger sister and 11 others dead.

Emergency services in France with the bodies of migrants who died trying to cross the Channel to England in Boulogne-sur-Mer
Emergency services in France with the bodies of migrants who died trying to cross the Channel to England in Boulogne-sur-Mer. (Photo by Bernard BARRON / AFP)

About 100 people gathered on Wednesday evening at a candlelight vigil in the northern French city of Calais to pay tribute to the 12 migrants who died a day previously in the deadliest such disaster this year.

The 34-year-old Eritrean recounted the ‘horrific’ moment he lost his 18-year-old sister, whom he said had a, ‘whole future ahead of her’.

“In four or five minutes, it was completely destroyed and sank,” he said, describing the moment the boat capsized plunging dozens into the English Channel’s treacherous waters.

He grabbed his sister’s hand and tried to find something to hang on to but a wave pushed them apart.

“Then the rescue ship came, and when they rescued me, I saw my sister … she was already dead.”

“Only God knows how I survived,” he said.

Tuesday’s death toll is the highest since November 2021, when 27 migrants lost their lives in the Channel, an incident that sparked tensions between France and Britain over who needed to do more to prevent such disasters.

The two countries have for years sought to stop the flow of migrants, who pay smugglers thousands of euros per head for the passage to England from France aboard small boats.

On Monday alone, 351 migrants crossed in small boats, with 21,615 making the journey this year, according to UK government statistics.

Earlier this summer British Prime Minister Keir Starmer and France’s President Emmanuel Macron pledged to strengthen ‘cooperation’ in handling the surge in undocumented migrant numbers.

But for some activists at the vigil, like Feyrouz Lajili, those efforts are falling short with this year’s death toll at 25, up from 12 last year.

“We’re angry and upset, not least because we feel these deaths could have been prevented,” said Lajili, project coordinator for international NGO Doctors Without Borders.

Steve Smith, head of the Care4Calais charity agreed, saying investment in security measures was ‘not reducing crossings’.

“It is simply pushing people to take ever increasing risks to do so,” he said.

Another survivor of Tuesday’s disaster said the first rescue boats to arrive on scene were too small to accommodate the 60 or so migrants in the water.

“There were a lot of girls and young boys, and I saw them die,” Amanuel, from Eritrea, who did not provide his full name, told AFP.

He described struggling to hold on to what remained of the boat while others clung to him.

French authorities seek to stop migrants taking to the water but do not intervene once they are afloat except for rescue purposes, citing safety concerns.

All resources that could be mobilised on Tuesday were, said the French government’s junior minister for maritime affairs, Herve Berville.

But he added people need to know that, “while this rescue operation is underway… it isn’t the only emergency at sea”.

One of the last to be rescued, Amanuel said he would not attempt the crossing again.

Others, like Muhammadullah, say they are not dissuaded by the risks.

Having fled Afghanistan to escape the Taliban, Muhammadullah, who also only gave one name, told AFP that he would have liked to stay in France but could not get the papers he needed to remain in the country.

So the only choice that remains is to attempt the crossing again, and soon.

“I don’t know else what to do,” he said, “there’s only England left.”

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MIGRANT CRISIS

Calais mayor urges migration showdown with Britain

The mayor of northern French port city Calais on Wednesday urged the government to take a tougher line with Britain on irregular cross-Channel migration, a day after a dozen people died seeking to cross to England in the worst such tragedy this year.

Calais mayor urges migration showdown with Britain

Britain’s “hypocrisy is being inflicted on us” Calais’ conservative mayor Natacha Bouchart told reporters in a press conference that confirmed the toll of 12, including six children.

Bouchart pointed to labour laws in Britain that some French politicians argue are a draw for migrants to attempt the dangerous crossing, as well as the existence of British people-smuggling outfits.

“At some point we need to have a showdown with this government” to avoid “being in the same place in 50 years, with people wanting to reach England because it’s still an El Dorado,” she added.

Britain has been sharing some costs for beefed-up policing on France’s north coast, including €4.5 million for 11 kilometres of fencing around a cargo terminal that Bouchart unveiled Wednesday.

The barriers are supposed to stop people slipping aboard trucks bound for the UK via ferries or through the Channel Tunnel.

Didier Leschi, head of France’s Ofii immigration and integration authority, said Britain “has an internal system that appears like an El Dorado — certainly in error — because it’s a country where you can easily get work without having a residency permit”.

He told broadcaster France Info that survivors of Tuesday’s disaster would be offered the opportunity to file an asylum claim in France but “it’s not certain that they will accept”.

Meanwhile the office of France’s rights ombudsman in a statement said the mass deaths, which bring 2024’s total toll to at least 37, “call for a profound reshaping of national and European asylum and immigration policy”.

This year has been the deadliest in the Channel since mass small boat crossings took off in 2018, when ferry and tunnel access was locked down.

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