
Britain Commences ‘One-In, One-Out’ Migrant Deal
The first deportation under the agreement signals London’s crackdown on illegal Channel crossings, with France soon to start its own returns programme.

The first deportation under the agreement signals London’s crackdown on illegal Channel crossings, with France soon to start its own returns programme.

Britain’s first “one in, one out” deportation flight finally left the runway—but legal challenges meant every migrant slated for removal stayed behind.

Around 200 illegal migrants are demanding compensation for alleged mistreatment at the Manston holding centre, with lawyers invoking the ECHR.

One dead as rescue teams are deployed in the English Channel.

Amid rising pressure to address illegal migration, the UK PM plans to shift asylum-seeking military-age males from hotels to disused military sites.

Two police officers suffered minor injuries during a protest in Epping.

French officials clearly aren’t serious about stopping illegal migrants from reaching the UK—but then again, neither are their British counterparts.

A bank holiday surge saw 860 arrivals from across the Channel, deepening Britain’s migration crisis under the Labour government.

Anger as migrant invasion coincides with huge payments to the government bureaucrats paid to prevent it.

As the crisis in the Channel deepens, the brains adjacent to the failing, flailing Starmer government present a new strategy document.