French police stop migrant boat before it leaves shore for the FIRST time

French police have adopted a new strategy of puncturing migrant boats near Boulogne-sur-Mer, forcing people to abandon their crossing attempt. The move, endorsed by Home Secretary Yvette Cooper, aims to prevent criminal gangs from exploiting French waters. This shift comes as Channel crossings to the UK hit record levels this year.

Jul 4, 2025 - 21:43
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French police stop migrant boat before it leaves shore for the FIRST time

French police have been filmed puncturing migrant boats at sea in a significant tactical shift endorsed by Home Secretary Yvette Cooper. Officers armed with knives entered the water near Boulogne-sur-Mer on Friday, deflating dinghies in shallow waters where migrants could wade back to shore. The intervention forced dozens of people, including women and children, to abandon their crossing attempt as their vessel began to sink. Cooper described the approach as a 'different' and 'welcome' strategy.

'We've seen criminal gangs this year really exploiting the fact that the French rules for too long have meant that they could not intervene in French waters,' Cooper said. 'The French interior minister has been determined to change those rules.' The new approach represents a major policy reversal as French authorities had previously refused water interventions, citing maritime law concerns about endangering lives at sea. French ministers have now authorised the interventions whilst maintaining they will 'respect' the 'law of the sea'.

The tactical change comes as Channel crossings reach unprecedented levels. A record 20,422 migrants have arrived in the UK so far this year, marking a nearly 50 per cent increase compared to last year. This represents the highest number recorded in the first six months of any year since crossings began in 2018 - June alone saw 5,170 arrivals. GB News has also revealed that the total number of crossings made since Sir Keir Starmer came to power a year ago now stands above 44,000 - a figure which puts the Prime Minister's tally 40 per cent up compared to his predecessor Rishi Sunak.

Despite a three-year £480million Anglo-French agreement to combat crossings, French authorities have stopped fewer than 40 per cent of boats this year, the lowest proportion on record. However, new strategy involves French border police and gendarmes intervening in shallow waters within 300 metres of the shore to prevent boats from departing. The expanded approach is expected to be formally unveiled at next week's Anglo-French summit during Emmanuel Macron's three-day state visit to the UK. Cooper revealed she has been in discussions with French authorities about intercepting people smugglers' taxi boats not only in shallow coastal waters but also as they travel from rivers and inland waterways to collect migrants.

'I've been talking to the French interior minister about the importance of action in French waters,' Cooper said. 'That's what we need in order to prevent boat crossings.' The Home Secretary also confirmed that Britain's small boats operational command has been collaborating closely with French authorities to develop these intervention options. Cooper announced that every migrant arriving on a boat where someone has died should face prosecution.

According to the source: GB News.

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