Boy, two, among four deaths in two ‘tragedies’ involving small boats off France

French interior minister Bruno Retailleau says the boy had been ‘trampled to death’ after the vessel suffered engine failure

A group of migrants arriving in to Dover, Kent, from the RNLI Dover Lifeboat following one of the small boat incidents in the Channel. Photograph: Gareth Fuller/PA Wire
A group of migrants arriving in to Dover, Kent, from the RNLI Dover Lifeboat following one of the small boat incidents in the Channel. Photograph: Gareth Fuller/PA Wire

A two-year-old boy, a woman and two men died in “two tragedies” off the coast of France, the Prefect of Pas-de-Calais region has confirmed.

Jacques Billant, said that in the first incident on Saturday, the French coastguard responded to a boat carrying nearly 90 people on board which was suffering engine failure.

A total of 15 people were recovered from onboard to a tow vessel called l’Abeille, including the boy who was unconscious and despite a medical team being scrambled by helicopter, he was declared dead.

The French interior minister Bruno Retailleau posted on X that the boy had been “trampled to death”.

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Mr Billant said that the other 14 migrants, including a 17-year-old who suffered burns to his legs, were taken to the port of Boulogne to receive care before being questioned by police.

The rest of the occupants were allowed to continue their journey to the UK, Mr Billant said.

In the second incident, a boat with 83 people on board which had sailed from the Calais area, suffered several engine failures which caused panic on board leading to some of the occupants falling into the sea. They were all rescued.

But Mr Billant said that when 71 migrants were transferred from the inflatable boat to the Flamant – a French navy patrol boat, three people were found unconscious at the bottom of the boat.

He said that they were “probably crushed and suffocated during the jostling and drowned in the 40 centimetres of water present in the boat”.

He added: “Despite the intervention of the doctors, they were declared dead. They are two men and a woman, all three around 30 years old.”

Mr Billant said the remaining 12 occupants attempted to continue their journey across the Channel, but were eventually rescued again and taken back to France.

“Two new tragedies occurred at sea this morning. The toll is very heavy, since we deeply regret the death of four people: two men, a woman and a child.”

Mr Billant told a press conference that the two incidents on Saturday followed previous fatal incidents on September 3rd and 15th – and brings the total of deaths so far this year to 51.

He said that people-smugglers had separated children from their parents to go on the overcrowded boats, but did not specify if this included the boy who died.

Mr Billant said: “Through the lure of profit and disregard for human life, smuggling networks are putting people at ever greater risk, not only adults but also more and more families with children and babies, to whom they sell crossings on a dangerous sea and in totally unsuitable boats.

“This is literally leading them to accidents and death, as was the case on September 3rd, September 15th and again this morning.”

He added that the migrants rescued on Saturday were from Eritrea, Vietnam, Afghanistan, Iran, Ethiopia, Libya, Syria, Egypt, Kuwait and Iraq.

Mr Retailleau posted on X: “Today several people died trying to cross the Channel. A child was trampled to death in a boat. A terrible tragedy that must make us all aware of the tragedy that is unfolding.

“The people smugglers have the blood of these people on their hands and our government will intensify the fight against these mafias who are getting rich by organising these crossings of death.”

British home secretary Yvette Cooper said that she had been in touch with the French interior minister.

She posted on X on Saturday afternoon: “It is appalling that more lives have been lost in the Channel today, including a young child, as criminal smuggler gangs continue to organise these dangerous boat crossings.

“The gangs do not care if people live or die – this is a terrible trade in lives.”

Dr Wanda Wyporska, chief executive of Safe Passage International, said: “It’s appalling that a child has been reportedly trampled to death and yet more people have lost their lives attempting to cross the Channel to reach safety.

“Far too many people have died this year at the hands of smugglers who are exploiting the UK’s lack of safe routes for refugees. Refugees cannot apply for asylum in the UK without being in the country.

“Without safe routes for refugees to get here, we will only see more children, women and men dying in desperate attempts to reach somewhere safe to start to rebuild their lives with family. The government must urgently provide safe pathways for them to do that.”

The fatal incident comes after the British Home Office confirmed that 395 migrants arrived in the UK crossed the English Channel on Friday in the first arrivals in five days.

The latest arrivals, who had travelled in seven boats, bring the total for the year to 25,639. This compares to 25,330 by the same date last year and 33,611 in 2022.

This week the UK and other G7 nations agreed an anti-smuggling action plan designed to boost co-operation on the issue following talks in Italy.

The British Home Office said this includes joint investigations and intelligence-sharing in a bid to target criminal smuggling routes.

The action plan also details “working collaboratively” with social media companies to monitor the internet and different platforms to prevent them being used to enable migrant smuggling and people trafficking.

This includes calling on social media companies “to do more to respond to online content that advertises migrant smuggling services”. – PA