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Eagle: People-smuggling gangs must be stopped even with ‘whack-a-mole’ approach

10 Dec 2024 3 minute read
Migrants rescued by the RNLI off the Kent coast.

Having to take a “whack-a-mole” approach to tackling people smuggling is no reason not to try and prevent criminal gangs, a Home Office minister has said.

Asked whether the Government’s plans on people smuggling go far enough and whether they have an approach akin to the fairground game, Dame Angela Eagle told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme: “Just because you have to play whack-a-mole, it doesn’t mean you shouldn’t try to take down organised immigration crime and disrupt the people that are putting people’s lives at risk in the Channel for huge amounts of money.”

Pledge

She added: “It’s important that our new border security command works operationally across borders with our colleagues in Europe to disrupt cross-border smuggling and that’s what we’re going to do.”

The comments come as Germany has pledged to tighten its law to make it easier to prosecute people smugglers enabling small boat crossings to Britain, as part of a new deal signed between the two countries on tackling immigration crime.

Berlin has confirmed plans to reform its legal framework to make it a clear criminal offence to “facilitate the smuggling of migrants to the UK” as part of the agreement, the Home Office said.

It said the move would give German prosecutors more tools to tackle the supply and storage of dangerous small boats.

Commitment

Both countries will also commit to exchange information that may help to remove migrant-smuggling content from social media platforms and tackle end-to-end routes of criminal smuggling networks as part of the deal.

Nancy Faeser, German federal minister of the interior said: “We are now stepping up our joint action to fight the brutal activities of international smugglers.

“This is at the core of our joint action plan that we have agreed in London.

“It will help us end the inhumane activities of criminal migrant smuggling organisations.

“By cramming people into inflatable boats under threats of violence and sending them across the Channel, these organisations put human lives at risk.”

Deal

She said that “many of these crimes are planned in Germany” and the deal would help to counter “this unscrupulous business with even more resolve”.

Dame Angela had earlier said that she was “delighted” with the agreement, and told Times Radio: “We know that the smuggling gangs use Germany as a dropping-off point and an organisational point for a lot of their logistics.”

She added: “We are delighted that we’ve managed to get this new agreement on increased cooperation, increased sharing of intelligence and prosecutorial cooperation with the Germans, we think it will make a real difference.”


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Howie
Howie
9 days ago

German ambassador saying it’s more symbolic as the refugees have to travel through other EU countries where it is illegal to traffic refugees like Belgian Holland and France before getting to channel and putting their lives at risk.

Jeff
Jeff
9 days ago

Lets see, I read that because we left the EU, that removed the legal tools Germany had so didn’t need to apply them because we were no longer part of the EU.

Brexit eh.

Howie
Howie
9 days ago
Reply to  Jeff

German law stops trafficking to other EU countries, to get to channel refugees need to travel through other EU countries so effectively already blocked.

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