The Royal Navy has been criticised for being a “waste of time and resources” by using boats too big for the job of rescuing migrants crossing the English Channel.
Women, children and single men are among hundreds of people brought ashore on Good Friday as the Ministry of Defence takes over responsibility for handling migrants crossing the English Channel.
Royal Navy patrol vessels have been posted in the Channel to oversee operations after being put in charge by Prime Minister Boris Johnson from Thursday.
Royal Navy P2000 patrol boats @HMSExpress @HMSExample @hms_blazer all in the Dover Strait right now together with OPV @hms_tyne
RN involvement in migrant patrols being stepped up as weather improves?
(Library photo) pic.twitter.com/rZSVWJKaIJ
— Navy Lookout (@NavyLookout) April 14, 2022
The naval ships have been spotted towing empty dinghies used by the people smugglers back to the UK after those onboard were offloaded on to boats operated by Border Force, which is part of the Home Office.
Portsmouth-based patrol vessel HMS Blazer, which is 21m long and 6m wide, was pictured towing two small boats into Dover on Thursday.
Blazer driving aggressively into station during this year’s Squadron Exercise! Thanks @HmsScimitar for the footage! #royalnavy #coastalforcessquadron @CdrJamieWells pic.twitter.com/jsFep4W7Fd
— HMS Blazer (@hms_blazer) July 9, 2021
Military personnel waiting at the dockside in Dover have then been meeting the arrivals and placing them on to buses to be taken to processing centres.
Political commentator Nigel Farage has criticised the navy’s response as a “waste of time and resources” by using vessels which are “too high to pick up migrants”, meaning the RNLI and Border Force were still required to carry out the task.
He posted on Twitter: “The new Royal Navy presence in the Channel off to a terrible start…
“The gunwhales on the vessels are too high to pick up migrants, so the RNLI & Border Force are doing the job instead!
“The Navy are then going around picking up the empty dinghies. Waste of time and resources!”
The new Royal Navy presence in the Channel off to a terrible start…
The gunwhales on the vessels are too high to pick up migrants, so the RNLI & Border Force are doing the job instead!
The Navy are then going around picking up the empty dinghies.
Waste of time and resources!
— Nigel Farage (@Nigel_Farage) April 15, 2022
The MoD, Home Office and RNLI have been approached for comment.
Mr Johnson put the Royal Navy in “operational command” of handling boats crossing the Channel while, under newly-revealed plans, those detained could be flown to Rwanda within weeks.
The MoD has confirmed that 562 people were brought ashore from 14 boats on Thursday.
These figures do not include any being intercepted by the French authorities.
A further 600 are understood to have been brought to the UK on Wednesday, but the Home Office has not provided figures for what was its final day of responsibility for handling Channel crossings.
This means the total of migrants to have arrived in the UK so far this year including Good Friday will be about 6,000, according to figures compiled by the PA News agency.
Subscribe or register today to discover more from DonegalLive.ie
Buy the e-paper of the Donegal Democrat, Donegal People's Press, Donegal Post and Inish Times here for instant access to Donegal's premier news titles.
Keep up with the latest news from Donegal with our daily newsletter featuring the most important stories of the day delivered to your inbox every evening at 5pm.