The UK Home Office has announced it will fund an additional 300 National Crime Agency (NCA) officers to combat people-smuggling operations responsible for illegal small boat crossings in the English Channel. This expansion will be supported by a £100 million allocation from the department’s existing budget, which also includes investments in new technology and equipment.
So far this year, more than 25,000 individuals have made the crossing from France to the UK in small boats—a record high by the end of July. Home Secretary Yvette Cooper emphasized that the new funding would strengthen the UK’s ability to track and dismantle smuggling gangs. However, the opposition Conservative Party criticized the move as a headline-grabbing gesture with little real impact.
The government is under pressure to demonstrate effective action as the number of crossings continues to rise. Although Prime Minister Keir Starmer has not repeated the previous government’s slogan to “stop the boats,” he has pledged to “smash the gangs,” a promise his administration is now working to fulfill.
Additional steps are being taken to address the broader immigration challenge. The government has vowed to shut down asylum hotels before the next general election and speed up the appeals process for those whose asylum claims have failed. A new pilot agreement with France, expected to be signed soon, will operate on a “one in, one out” basis—returning some migrants to France in exchange for accepting the same number of vetted asylum seekers.
Border Security and Asylum Minister Angela Eagle declined to specify how many individuals would be returned under the plan. She acknowledged the absence of a formal EU returns agreement since Brexit and described the issue as a complex problem that has developed over the past six years.
The Home Office aims to target key smuggling leaders who operate across Europe, the Middle East, Africa, and beyond. Yvette Cooper noted the gangs’ adaptability and disregard for human life in their pursuit of profit. According to NCA director Rob Jones, the agency currently has 91 active investigations into people-smuggling operations linked to the UK.
The new NCA roles will complement the specialist investigator and intelligence officer positions introduced last year. Still, critics argue the measures fall short. Shadow Home Secretary Chris Philp accused Labour of lacking a serious plan, while Reform UK’s Nigel Farage claimed the government was merely throwing money at the crisis without addressing the root causes.
Successive Labour and Conservative governments have struggled to reduce the number of illegal small boat arrivals. The previous Conservative plan to deport migrants to Rwanda was halted by legal challenges and ultimately scrapped by the Starmer government, which labeled it a gimmick.
In a related move, the government is introducing a new criminal offence to target online promotion of illegal Channel crossings. While aiding illegal immigration is already a crime, the new law aims to give police and agencies more tools to disrupt smuggling networks by targeting those advertising services like fake documents or illegal work opportunities.
Finally, the government will tighten immigration rules starting next month to prevent abuse of student visas by individuals intending to claim asylum later. Universities will face stricter thresholds on visa refusal and course completion rates to maintain their sponsorship privileges. Universities UK has urged the Home Office to provide better real-time data to help institutions manage emerging risks.