One in, one out… and back in again: Migrant finally sent to France in Government’s bungled exchange scheme has RETURNED to UK on a small boat

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Migrants crossing from northern France by dinghy last month


Labour’s ‘one in, one out’ deal with France turned to farce today as it emerged a man deported under the scheme has come back to Britain on a small boat.

Home Office sources confirmed the unnamed Iranian first arrived here on August 6 – the first day the French deal was in force – and was removed from Britain on September 19.

But he skipped a migrant shelter in Paris, where he had been housed, and headed back to the northern French coast.

There he boarded a dinghy back to the UK, arriving on Saturday – less than a month after he was kicked out.

Border officials identified him as a returning migrant and he is now being held in a British immigration removal centre.

It came as two significant milestones were passed as more than 100 new small boat migrants reached Britain today.

The total number to have arrived since Labour came to power has now soared past 60,000.

And this year has seen the second highest annual number of small boat migrants since the crisis began nearly seven years ago, topping the 36,816 witnessed last year.

The Iranian migrant’s ludicrous to-and-fro journey highlights further serious flaws in the ‘one in, one out’ deal agreed between Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer and President Emmanuel Macron.

When it was first unveiled in the summer senior officials were unable to give an explanation of what would prevent deported migrants heading straight back to the Channel, saying only that they would be subject to the French immigration system.

The Daily Mail understands the Home Office is now trying urgently to return the back-and-forth migrant to France again.

He was the third migrant to be removed under the scheme, after an Indian man on September 18 and an Eritrean earlier on September 19.

Since Labour’s returns deal came into force on August 6, 11,298 small boat migrants have reached Britain.

Only 42 migrants have been sent back under the French treaty, including the man who has now returned.

A further 23 migrants have been allowed into Britain under the terms of the deal, which allows them to ‘regularise’ their status. Most are expected to claim asylum.

The deal was trumpeted as Labour’s flagship measure to tackle the Channel crisis, after the PM scrapped the Tories’ Rwanda asylum scheme as one of his first acts in office. 

The returned migrant has claimed he is not safe in France and is a victim of modern slavery at the hands of people trafficking gangs.

‘If I had felt that France was safe for me I would never have returned to the UK,’ the migrant said in an interview with the Guardian.

‘When we were returned to France we were taken to a shelter in Paris.

‘I didn’t dare to go out because I was afraid for my life.

‘The smugglers are very dangerous. They always carry weapons and knives

‘I fell into the trap of a human trafficking network in the forests of France before I crossed to the UK from France the first time.

Migrants crossing from northern France by dinghy last month

‘They took me like a worthless object, forced me to work, abused me, and threatened me with a gun and told me I would be killed if I made the slightest protest.

‘Every day and every night I was filled with terror and stress.

‘Every day I live in fear and anxiety, every loud noise, every shadow, every strange face scares me.

‘When I reached UK the first time and Home Office asked what had happened to me I was crying and couldn’t speak about this because of shame.’

Yesterday the Daily Mail reported how Migration Watch UK, which campaigns for tougher border controls, had calculated the returns deal would take nearly 300 years, at current rates, to remove all the small boat migrants who have arrived since it came into force.

Commenting on the record-breaking number of arrivals so far this year the group’s chairman Alp Mehmet said: ‘Migration Watch has warned time and time again that without proper deterrence or effective action against those crossing the Channel illegally, numbers would go on rocketing.

‘This is no way to control the border.

‘Sir Keir Starmer and his Home Secretary must get with it and get a grip.

‘The public have had enough of talk and gimmicks with no action.’

Home Secretary Shabana Mahmood blamed the Tories for the deepening crisis.

‘The previous government left our borders in crisis, and we are still living with the consequences,’ she said.

‘These figures are shameful – the British people deserve better.

‘This Government is taking action. We have detained and removed more than 35,000 who were here illegally.

‘Our historic deal with the French means those who arrive on small boats are now being sent back.

‘But it is clear we must go further and faster – removing more of those here illegally, and stopping migrants from making small boat crossings in the first place.

‘And I have been clear: I will do whatever it takes to restore order to our border.’

A Home Office spokesman said: ‘We will not accept any abuse of our borders, and we will do everything in our power to remove those without the legal right to be here.

‘Individuals who are returned under the pilot and subsequently attempt to re-enter the UK illegally will be removed.’


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