More than 500,000 Afghan migrants are heading for Europe and the Channel coast as intelligence chiefs discuss how to tackle exodus

  • More than 500,000 Afghan migrants have crossed the border since fall of Kabul 
  • They are heading for Europe and the Channel coast, intelligence experts warned
  • Priti Patel last week held an emergency summit with her counterparts in the international Five Eyes intelligence alliance 

More than half a million Afghan migrants have crossed the border since the fall of Kabul last year and are heading for Europe and the Channel coast, intelligence experts have warned Ministers.

Priti Patel last week held an emergency summit with her counterparts in the international Five Eyes intelligence alliance to discuss how to track the exodus.

The Home Secretary is also seeking to toughen the UK's response to migrants who cross the Channel, with Border Force teams moving between hotels in Britain to round up migrants and move them to holding centres on military bases.

Last year saw the record number of migrant crossings as more than 28,000 people made the journey across the Channel

Last year saw the record number of migrant crossings as more than 28,000 people made the journey across the Channel

A record 28,395 migrants reached the UK illegally last year by taking small boats across the Channel, a 200 per cent increase on 2020's tally

A record 28,395 migrants reached the UK illegally last year by taking small boats across the Channel, a 200 per cent increase on 2020's tally

The Five Eyes group – comprising the US, UK, Australia, Canada and New Zealand – combines the resources of MI6, GCHQ, the CIA and the other nations' domestic intelligence agencies, and can be traced back to the informal meetings between American and UK code-breakers during the Second World War.

The 500,000 migrants displaced by political turmoil arising from the Taliban takeover and a famine in Afghanistan this winter is in addition to the 2.6 million existing Afghan refugees around the world. 

Of those, around 2.2 million are in Iran and Pakistan with a further 3.5 million people displaced within Afghanistan itself.

Skipper beaches YACHT in East Sussex before 20 flee 

About 20 suspected migrants came ashore at Rye in East Sussex yesterday – 30 miles west of Dover.

Video footage, left, filmed by onlookers showed the skipper of the ten-metre yacht deliberately running aground at the town's harbour just after midday.

Witnesses said those on board leapt off the vessel and swam to the shore before running away.

Border Force officers appeared around two hours later to begin looking for the migrants, claimed sources in the town, which dates back to medieval times.

One said: 'It was very strange. We thought it was just a yacht coming in as normal and then it twice rammed into the shore to run aground.

'The captain jumped out and rowed ashore. He looked like he knew what he was doing as he just ran away and left the others, who had to swim.' 

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One area of concern is the potential weaponisation of Afghan refugees by Belarus, which is said to actively 'importing' migrants and encouraging them to cross into the EU via Poland and Lithuania.

'The Afghan situation is going to cause serious problems over the coming months if we do not get a grip now,' said a Government source. 

'A big part of the problem is the Schengen open borders system which allows them to pass freely across the EU until they reach Calais. 

'MI6 and GCHQ are at the forefront of international efforts to keep on top of it.'

The United Nations last year said a worst-case scenario was that 500,000 refugees could flee Afghanistan following the US-led withdrawal from the country. 

Around 12,000 Afghan refugees are currently living in UK hotels, with permanent homes so far found for more than 4,000.

The Government has faced acute embarrassment over its failure to stem illegal migration on small boats across the Channel.

Migrants peer through the misted-up windows of a bus after arriving in Dover, Kent, after a gruelling journey across the Channel

Migrants peer through the misted-up windows of a bus after arriving in Dover, Kent, after a gruelling journey across the Channel

More than 28,000 migrants used the route last year – triple the number recorded in 2020. 

A further 1,341 successfully made the journey last month, and it was recently reported that the Army is to begin building camps on Ministry of Defence land to house up to 30,000 Channel migrants.

The Government has been criticised over conditions at the Napier barracks in Folkestone, where up to 350 asylum seekers have been housed since September 2020.

How many migrants reached Britain in 2021, by month? 
January 223
February 308
March 831
April 751
May 1,619
June 2,179
July 3,510
August 3,012
September 4,652
October 2,671
November 6,869
December 1,770
Total 28,395

Officials hope the new but more spartan accommodation on MoD premises – rather than the comforts of hotels – will act as a disincentive to migrants to travel to the UK. 

But Enver Solomon, chief executive of the Refugee Council, said: 'People have always been given a fair hearing on British soil to ensure those who need protection are given it and those who don't are returned.

'We must do the same today and have an asylum system that is both orderly and fair, treating people with respect and compassion rather than seeking to criminalise or hold people, often already very traumatised, in military-style camps.'

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