French Race-Traitors Caught Smuggling Hundreds of Albanians in Fishing Boats to Britain

Daily Mail
June 20, 2014

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UK border staff interrogate immirants in Marble Arch: Arrests are expected in Britain after police in France broke up an alleged people smuggling ring that brought Albanian migrants into the country for £12,000 a family.

French fishermen are among a dozen people accused of smuggling more than 200 illegal immigrants across the Channel to the south coast of England.

They are said to have dropped them off at small ports and remote beaches and coves between Plymouth and Weymouth to avoid immigration checks.

Armed officers arrested members of the human trafficking gang in dawn raids in Brittany on Tuesday.

The fishermen and sailing boat skippers are alleged to have ferried more than 200 Albanian immigrants across the sea in their own vessels over an 18-month period. There were 14 trips, mostly in 2012, and the immigrants paid up to £8,000 each, according to French police.

The criminal mastermind behind the trafficking ring, a wealthy Kosovan, was arrested in the port city of St Malo. Another Kosovan, who is thought to have helped to organise the smuggling trips, was arrested at his home in Lamballe, near St Brieuc.

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An Albanian mother begs with her child near Baker Street, London: Albania is a ‘potential’ European Union candidate, but at present its nationals are not allowed free movement to live and work in Britain.

Ten local fishermen and sailing boat captains were also rounded up in fishing ports and towns in Brittany’s Cotes-d’Armor region as part of the international police operation.

Last night all the suspects were in custody in Rennes. More arrests are expected in the UK and France in the coming days.

A French police spokesman said: ‘This gang are believed to have smuggled around 200 Albanians from Brittany to the southern coast of England.

‘It is thought they were dropped off at smaller ports and beaches along the English coast between Weymouth and Plymouth.

‘We are in contact with our counterparts in Britain and inquiries into other gangs possibly involved in people trafficking between Britain and France are ongoing.’

A police source added: ‘The method was chosen because it avoids the many checks that lorries go through when they board ferries to the UK.’

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The joint Franco-British operation was prompted by the arrest of two boat captains in January 2013. The skippers, both Bretons in their 20s, had hired a luxury yacht, the Koo 2 Bool, on the pretext of sailing to the Caribbean.

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