French police face ‘titanic task’ as smugglers up
their game
Police say they are struggling to fight trafficking
networks that have ‘become professional’ in record time.
BY CLEA
CAULCUTT
November
26, 2021 4:00 am
https://www.politico.eu/article/people-smugglers-france-police-channel-migration/
PARIS —
There’s only so much French police on the beach can do to stop the stream of
migrants heading for the Channel.
“It’s the
sheer numbers,” said Nicolas Laroye, a police trade unionist and border control
officer in Calais. “Some evenings there are up to 50 boats leaving the coast,
so we’ll catch half, but it’s not enough. We can’t put a police officer behind
every dune.”
27 people
drowned when a vessel capsized in the Channel on Wednesday, prompting calls for
overhaul of cross-Channel cooperation to fight clandestine migration routes.
Seven women and three children are among the dead, according to a local
prosecutor.
“We’re
overwhelmed,” said Laroye. “We would need a lot more people if we wanted to be
100 percent efficient.”
Speaking on
French radio RTL, French Interior Minister Gérald Darmanin said police faced a
“titanic task” when it came to battling trafficking networks, despite having
increased police patrols in the Calais region and receiving a €64 million
contribution from the U.K.
“We are
familiar with the mafia organizations [behind the trafficking] — they use
encrypted phones and operate much like terrorist networks,” he said.
In the wake
of the tragedy, U.K. Prime Minister Boris Johnson and French President Emmanuel
Macron vowed to do “everything possible to stop the gangs responsible.”
It appears,
however, that French police have been on the back foot for a while now.
Record
growth
The
phenomenon of small boats has grown in record time since its appearance in
2018. Migrants were looking for new routes to the U.K. after increased police
checks and fences were built in the Calais port and Eurostar terminal.
“Initially
it was just migrants trying their luck with small boats found locally,” said
Laroye, who has been a border police officer for 13 years. “Then people
traffickers got involved and we saw a lot of boats stolen along the coast.”
“Nowadays
we stop trucks traveling from Germany with several boats inside,” he added.
The numbers
of crossings show how the scale has changed. Over 33,000 migrants tried to
cross the Channel in 2021, according to the French coastguard, compared to less
than 10,000 migrants in 2020.
Overall,
close to 26,000 migrants reached the U.K. by small boats this year, according
to the British home office.
The
smugglers have upped their game.
“It’s not
so much that the number of boats has increased,” said Véronique Magnin, a
spokesperson for the French maritime authority. “It’s that the people smugglers
have become a lot more professional. They put a lot more people in each boat,
around up 30 to 40 people per vessel, and set off at sea without being stopped
by the police.”
Indeed, the
number of departures in small vessels has only increased by 30 percent since
2020.
The people
smugglers have become better organized, said Magnin, with several boats often
setting off at the same time in operations that are “necessarily coordinated.”
The crossings have also continued later into the year, whereas they used to
pause during the winter months.
The French
police patrols on the beach have grown in response, from less than 200 to 800
deployed officers on average daily, according to Laroye, drawing on more and
more inland resources.
You could
argue they have been successful. According to the interior minister, over 1,500
traffickers have been arrested since the beginning of the year.
“[The
border police units] dismantle a lot of networks — but they know that when they
arrest 10 smugglers, then are 10 more that pop up,” said Laroye, adding the
migration route is just “too lucrative” for traffickers.
International
meeting on Sunday
Five people
were arrested in connection with the fatal crossing on Wednesday, including one
person who had “a German number plate,” according to Darmanin, and “who had
bought dinghies in Germany.”
French
officials say people smugglers exploit the free circulation of people among
Schengen countries and shortcomings in cross-border police cooperation to evade
arrests.
“[The
smugglers] are international and play with our borders,” said Darmanin on
Thursday. “We tell our Belgian friends, our German friends that we cannot be
alone in this fight.”
France is
now looking to take the fight upstream, across the European Union and to the
EU’s border agency Frontex. Speaking on Wednesday, Macron said he was calling
for “an immediate increase of the Frontex deployment on [the EU’s] external
borders,” which include the U.K.-France border since Brexit.
A meeting
of interior ministers from the United Kingdom, France, the Netherlands, Belgium
and Germany is expected in Calais on Sunday.
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