Updated
Updated · BBC.com · May 26
Alnour Mohamed Ali Pleads Guilty Over 4 Channel Deaths, Faces Sentencing on June 10
Updated
Updated · BBC.com · May 26

Alnour Mohamed Ali Pleads Guilty Over 4 Channel Deaths, Faces Sentencing on June 10

3 articles · Updated · BBC.com · May 26
  • Canterbury Crown Court heard 27-year-old Alnour Mohamed Ali admit piloting a small boat in a way that created a risk of death or serious injury after four migrants drowned on April 9.
  • Four people—two men and two women—were swept away by strong currents while trying to board a dinghy at Equihen-Plage near Boulogne-sur-Mer during an attempted English Channel crossing.
  • More than 40 people were rescued off northern France that morning; two children were taken to hospital as a precaution and another person was treated for hypothermia.
  • The National Crime Agency has said 74 people still sailed on to the UK, and Ali also admitted he knew he would arrive without valid entry clearance.
  • Ali is due to be sentenced on June 10 under a 2025 law creating a specific offence of endangering others on small-boat journeys from France, Belgium or the Netherlands.
Why prosecute individuals for piloting boats when many from their home countries are ultimately granted asylum?
With a new law jailing migrant pilots, why do dangerous Channel crossings with high death tolls persist?
Are smugglers' 'taxi boat' tactics making the UK's new £662 million Channel security deal obsolete?