Stop crossing the Channel and earn more at home, Albanian PM tells his people

Edi Rama tells young Albanians that working in rural tourism in their own country would be more lucrative than UK-based jobs

Albanian migrants
Border Force officials say Albanians now account for up to 60 per cent of arrivals from across the Channel, 100 times the number last year from the Balkan country Credit: Steve Finn

Albania’s prime minister has appealed to his people to stop crossing the English Channel in small boats as an estimated 2,000 massed in northern France ready to make the perilous journey.

Edi Rama told young Albanians that instead of spending thousands of pounds paying people smugglers to get across the Channel, they should invest the money in rural tourism businesses that would earn them more than they could make in the UK.

He pledged the Albanian government would provide financial support to back such plans amid concerns that the number of young Albanians seeking to cross the Channel is increasing.

Border Force officials say Albanians now account for up to 60 per cent of arrivals, 100 times the number last year from the Balkan country. Some 2,000 more Albanians are said to have reached northern France, and are now living in makeshift camps or crowding into B&Bs in Dunkirk and Calais before making their crossing.

Last week, Albania’s parliament unanimously backed a new “memorandum” with the UK to permit its police officers despatched to Britain to share criminal and biometric information on Albanian Channel migrants in an effort to fast-track their deportation back to the Balkans.

Edi Rama
Edi Rama has pledged financial support for rural tourism in his country amid concerns that the number of young Albanians seeking to cross the Channel is increasing Credit: Andrej Cukic/Shutterstock

Asked at the weekend about the exodus across the Channel, Mr Rama told reporters: “First of all, I would like to appeal to everyone not to take that path because it will be more and more difficult, it will become more and more expensive and most will fail.”

He admitted Albania could not offer Albanians the same “conditions” as the UK or Germany. “We are not magicians,” he said. But he insisted Albania had “many opportunities” for those who “really want to make their own success through work”.

Mr Rama suggested the £20,000 or £30,000 that people were paying traffickers to get to the UK could, with government support, enable them to build “agritourism” businesses based on their parents’ or grandparents’ smallholdings.

“You can make a lot more money than you can from an ordinary job in the UK unless you get involved with criminal networks that may lure you in with stories of more income but which ultimately lead to hell,” he said.

Criminal gangs and the cocaine trade

Law-enforcement agencies are concerned about the influx of Albanians, whose criminal gangs dominate the cocaine drug trade in the south of England and have expanded into cannabis farming by adapting agriponic techniques developed in Albania to grow the plants.

It is estimated that by the end of this month as many as 9,000 Albanians may have reached the UK. Overall, nearly 4,700 migrants have already crossed the Channel this month, bringing the total so far this year to 29,716, compared to 28,526 for the whole of 2021 and 8,400 in 2020.

Analysis of TikTok, used by people smugglers to advertised their services, suggests they are changing their tactics, making more pre-dawn launches to evade detection by French gendarmes, and putting younger men in charge of the boats as skippers to counter new laws imposing life sentences on those who pilot them.

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