People smugglers face being jailed for up to five years for looking up weather forecast under new terror-style laws

People smugglers face being jailed for up to five years for looking up weather forecast under new terror-style laws

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People smugglers face being jailed for up to five years for looking up weather forecast under new terror-style laws
Author: Julia Atherley
Published: Jan, 30 2025 22:10

TERROR-style laws could see people smugglers jailed for up to five years — just for looking up the Channel weather forecast. The Border Security, Asylum and Immigration Bill, introduced to Parliament yesterday, aims to crack down on gangs before they even get the chance to launch small boats. Anyone who “collects or makes a record of information of a kind likely to be useful to a person organising or preparing for a relevant journey” could be arrested.

 [Home Secretary Yvette Cooper speaking in the House of Commons about child sexual exploitation.]
Image Credit: The Sun [Home Secretary Yvette Cooper speaking in the House of Commons about child sexual exploitation.]

A new offence of endangering life at sea would target anyone refusing to be rescued or pushing their way on to overcrowded boats. The Home Office said it could not publish its estimate of how many arrests this could lead to because of “operational sensitivity”. The package of measures is predicted to cost £13.6million over ten years. Home Secretary Yvette Cooper said: "Over the last six years, criminal smuggling gangs have been allowed to take hold all along our borders, making millions out of small boat crossings.

 [Migrants in a small inflatable boat crossing the English Channel.]
Image Credit: The Sun [Migrants in a small inflatable boat crossing the English Channel.]

“This Bill will equip our law enforcement agencies with the powers they need to stop these vile criminals, disrupting their supply chains and bringing more of those who profit from human misery to justice. “These new counter terror-style powers, including making it easier to seize mobile phones at the border, along with statutory powers for our new Border Security Command.”. Border Security Commander Martin Hewitt, said the new measures would allow enforcement teams to “go further and act faster” when attempting to halt crossings.

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