-
Sabalenka wants to drink, 'forget about tennis' after Wimbledon exit
-
Reflective Ronaldo takes on critics 'trying to kill me for 23 years'
-
Mooney stars as Australia hammer England in women's World Cup final
-
Verstappen claims Red Bull car 'dangerous' after crash
-
Djokovic makes history, Osaka sends Sabalenka crashing out of Wimbledon
-
Trump thanks FIFA for suspending USA's Balogun World Cup ban
-
Osaka beats world number one Sabalenka in Wimbledon last 16
-
Mooney stars as Australia hammer England in women's T20 World Cup final
-
Eala eyeing Wimbledon quarters, Dimitrov faces Fery
-
Russell concedes Ferrari are threat to Mercedes
-
'Privileged' Del Toro wins Tour de France stage, Pogacar up to 2nd
-
Leclerc snaps winless run to reignite title race
-
Del Toro too tired to watch Mexico World Cup clash
-
Infernos devastate forests as Europe's temperatures rise again
-
Court frees Albania protesters held after violent clashes
-
'Tough' Leclerc delivers Ferrari's 250th win with victory in British GP
-
Four-legged rescuers lead way after Venezuela quakes
-
Tour de France stage 3rd stage to go ahead despite forest fires: official
-
France show they can ditch flair and win a different way in World Cup quest
-
Spain's Rodri warns Portugal best yet to come at World Cup
-
Australia hold England to 150-4 in Women's T20 World Cup final
-
Djokovic makes Wimbledon history to reach quarter-finals
-
Leclerc delivers Ferrari's 250th win with victory in British GP
-
Del Toro wins Tour de France stage, Pogacar up to 2nd
-
White supremacist march in DC just 'messy' democracy: US official
-
Euphoric homecoming for Cape Verde after heroic World Cup defeat
-
'Country Roads' stars as unofficial US anthem at World Cup
-
Tour de France stage under threat due to forest fires: official
-
F1 boss Domenicali hopes to restore cancelled Gulf grand prix
-
UK hard-right leader Farage faces new allegations over gifts
-
Real Madrid sign Dumfries from Inter Milan
-
OPEC+ raises quotas again as Middle East calms
-
At the foot of Mount Olympus, a return to ancient Greek heritage
-
Azam to captain Pakistan on West Indies and England Test tours
-
Turkey eyes F110 fighter jet engines as Trump comes to town
-
Revival hopes grow for long-closed Greek Orthodox seminary off Istanbul
-
England, Mexico take centre stage in Azteca blockbuster
-
Trump hails US, blasts 'communists' in 250th anniversary speech
-
'Very dangerous' super typhoon nears US Pacific islands
-
Taiwanese film hunters rescue ageing reels from bygone era
-
Australia stand by under-fire Popovic after World Cup exit
-
Trump arrives for US 250th birthday speech after storm delay
-
Afghan car trade screeches to a halt due to regional wars
-
All Blacks wing Fineanganofo's debut began 'in the toilet, spewing'
-
Pipe dreams: Bangladesh surfers chase waves at Asian Games
-
Xhaka -- Switzerland's World Cup rock born to be skipper
-
England can write new Azteca history by meeting Mexico challenge, says Tuchel
-
Trump pushes ahead with US 250th birthday speech after storm delay
-
Paraguay coach says team 'fought like lions' in World Cup loss to France
-
Australia's Schmidt rues missed opportunities as Wilson defends Donaldson
Under French coastguard's eye, migrants cross into English waters
Shortly after the sun rose Wednesday over the Channel, a small black dinghy weighed down by eight migrants crossed into UK waters, the latest illegal arrivals via this contentious route.
A French coastguard ship, "Jacques Oudart Fourmentin", approached the maritime boundary with Britain before turning around and heading back.
Minutes later, just over three kilometres (two miles) into British waters, a UK lifeboat arrived, took the migrants aboard and set course for the southeast English port of Dover.
For many in Britain, the scene unfolding in the soft dawn light is a source of frustration and anger: France appearing to escort migrants into UK waters, and a charity then picking them up.
"The French boat will have been following it for hours," said Matt Coker, the skipper of "Portia", a 11-metre (36-foot) boat chartered by AFP to see first-hand the near-daily routine in the Channel.
"They're picking it up a mile from the beach," he said of the French shadowing operation.
"It's had three-and-a-half hours to turn it around. I see it all the time -- the escorting -- and it annoys me."
To illustrate his point, Coker opened an app on his mobile phone showing the Fourmentin's hours-long path from near the French coastline to the maritime boundary where it left the small boat.
– 'Stop the boats' -
At a summit in Paris last month, British Prime Minister Rishi Sunak and French President Emmanuel Macron agreed a multi-million-pound pact designed to stop the illegal cross-Channel migration.
London will help pay for the deployment of hundreds of extra French law enforcement officers along its northern coast and for a detention centre there to cope with the number of migrants.
But on Wednesday, numerous UK border force and Royal National Lifeboat Institution (RNLI) vessels headed into one of the world's busiest shipping lanes following reports of multiple small boats bound for Britain. For now, at least, little appears to have changed.
The UK has been grappling with a surge in cross-Channel arrivals for around five years. In 2022, the numbers topped 45,000, increasing the country's asylum backlog.
Pledging to "stop the boats" this year, Sunak has unveiled draft legislation that would make such arrivals illegal and ineligible for asylum. Critics argue that will make Britain an international outlaw on refugee rights.
His government is also pressing ahead with controversial plans -- currently stalled by legal challenges -- to send thousands of asylum-seekers to Rwanda for processing and eventual resettlement there.
The latest cross-Channel journeys coincided with calm weather, but they follow weeks of stormy conditions that appear to have helped curb the number of arrivals so far this year.
The first three months of 2023 saw 3,793 migrants make the journey, 17 percent fewer than over the same period in 2022.
- 'It's a business' -
However, British border officials appeared prepared for Wednesday's increase, with a coastguard drone and aircraft visible in the skies above the grey waters.
Migrants could already be seen on Dover's dockside at dawn, after a Border Force vessel ventured out in the early hours.
The small boat witnessed by AFP arriving into British waters had eight men on board, all wearing coats, hats and bright orange life-jackets.
They initially waved at AFP photographers before motoring towards the RNLI lifeboat.
The lifeboat had radioed Coker minutes earlier to check on the welfare of the nearby migrants as the rescue vessel made its way at high speed from Dover.
Once it departed with the migrants aboard, another ship arrived to collect the discarded dinghy. It could be heard on open-wave radio frequencies confirming that it was the 98th such small boat it had retrieved so far this year.
Coker, 43, is from a family of sailors who has been navigating the Channel for more than two decades. The migrants arriving over the past five or six years had changed, he said.
There used to be more families, sometimes with children, attempting the perilous crossing.
But as the route has become increasingly popular with economic migrants from Albania -- they made up around a third of arrivals last year -- the arrivals now are predominantly young men, he said.
As organised crime groups on both sides of the Channel have expanded their operations, the boats have become more uniform -- typically long, black dinghies.
But they are still ill-suited for making the treacherous crossing, which has claimed more than 50 lives since 2018.
"It's just a business now," concluded Coker.
E.Hall--AT