UK to pay
France another £660m to curb Channel crossings
Three-year
deal includes funding for a riot squad to ‘disperse’ people trying to board
small boats
Rajeev
Syal Home affairs editor
Wed 22
Apr 2026 22.30 BST
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2026/apr/22/uk-pay-france-660m-to-curb-channel-crossings
The UK
government has agreed to pay France another £660m to curb the number of asylum
seekers travelling across the Channel, including plans to fund a riot squad to
“contain and disperse” people trying to board small boats.
Under a
three-year deal to be signed on Thursday by the home secretary, Shabana
Mahmood, 1,100 enforcement, intelligence and military officers – an increase of
40% – will be employed to track down smuggling gangs and people seeking refuge.
A
50-strong riot squad will be trained in “crowd-control tactics” and will “stop
illegal migrants in their tracks”, according to the Home Office. UK cash is
expected to fund batons, shields and teargas to deal with “hostile crowds and
violent tactics”.
The
announcement follows protracted negotiations between the two countries over how
to halt unauthorised small boat journeys, and who should pick up most of the
cost. The previous £478m, three-year deal collapsed on 31 March.
Organisations
representing asylum seekers said plans to fund policing tactics such as riot
control would mean the further brutalisation of people who have no alternative
if they wish to seek refuge in the UK.
Sile
Reynolds, head of asylum advocacy at the charity Freedom from Torture, said it
was a “deeply alarming” escalation, adding: “Now, we will be paying for police
boots and batons to be wielded indiscriminately against men, women and children
on the beaches of northern France for the crime of seeking safety.
“Many of
the people who will be harmed by these heavy-handed tactics have already
endured state violence during their flight from persecution. Now they will face
the full ferocity of the French riot police – a security body that has been
criticised by the United Nations committee against torture for excessive use of
force.”
Imran
Hussain, the director of external affairs at the Refugee Council, said: “By
focusing on policing the Channel, the government is treating the symptom not
the cause. Policing alone will not prevent desperate people from turning to
dangerous small boats in the first place.
“We know
from our frontline services why people risk their lives to reach the UK: many
already speak some English, have family here, or have cultural connections to
Britain. Without safe routes to reach the UK, these men, women and children
will be forced into dangerous and potentially deadly small boat crossings.”
French
police have fired teargas canisters and stun grenades and used pepper spray in
attempts to stop people boarding boats across the Channel. However, this is the
first time the UK will fund a riot squad specifically to tackle irregular
migration.
The new
deal includes a baseline package of about £500m to boost enforcement action on
beaches in northern France. The deal will cover:
Five new police units, including a riot squad
of 50 officers who will be trained in the use of crowd control.
An additional 20 maritime officers to target
and intercept small boats that pick up asylum seekers in shallow waters. In the
past two months, French officials have stopped six “taxi boats”, sentencing
smugglers to prison and deportation, the Home Office said.
An expansion of the 18-strong intelligence
unit to 30 specialists to ramp up the arrest and prosecution of people
smugglers.
Two new helicopters and a camera system to
track down and intercept people smugglers and people seeking to cross to the
UK.
The
government has also put aside £160m “to trial new approaches”, but the Home
Office did not respond to requests asking what these might be. In the first
year of this arrangement, the UK will spend £50m, a statement said.
If the
initial investment does not make an impact, the government will withhold the
remaining £110m in years two and three, it says, billing it as the first
“payment-by-results” scheme in the Channel.
Labour,
which is predicted to lose councils to Nigel Farage’s Reform UK in the local
elections, has come under increasing pressure from political opponents to curb
irregular migration.
In a
statement Keir Starmer, the prime minister, said: “Our work with the French has
already stopped tens of thousands of crossings and this government has deported
or returned nearly 60,000 people with no right to be here. This historic
agreement means we can go further: ramping up intelligence, surveillance and
boots on the ground to protect Britain’s borders.”
Mahmood
said: “This landmark deal will stop illegal migrants making the perilous
journey and put people smugglers behind bars.”
Earlier
this month, a Sudanese man was charged over the deaths of four migrants who
drowned after being swept away by strong currents while trying to cross the
Channel. More than 6,000 people have arrived in the UK this year after making
the journey, down 36% on the equivalent period last year.

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