Migrant crossings continue after 12 deaths in Channel
More people have been pictured being brought ashore in Dover
More migrants have embarked on the perilous Channel crossing, a day after 12 people died attempting the journey, but 300 made it to UK shores.
A pregnant woman and six children were among those who lost their lives in what is being described as the deadliest Channel crossings tragedy of the year so far when their boat was "ripped apart" and sank off the northern French coast of Cap Gris-Nez on Tuesday.
Dozens of migrants continued to make the journey this morning, with more people pictured being brought ashore in Dover, Kent, amid calm weather conditions at sea.
At the same time, a Calais charity told how around 200 migrants were spotted trying to embark on the crossing from a French beach earlier that morning - but were stopped by police.
Home Office figures show 317 migrants made the journey in five boats on Tuesday, suggesting an average of around 63 people per boat.
This takes the provisional total number of migrants who have arrived in the UK so far this year after crossing the Channel to 21,720 - 3% higher than this time last year (21,086) but 19% lower than at the same point in 2022 (26,692), PA news agency analysis of government data shows.
The latest tally means more than 8,000 arrivals have been recorded since Labour won the general election and Sir Keir Starmer became Prime Minister (8,146).
Up to 65 people were rescued in Tuesday's incident, which Home Secretary Yvette Cooper branded "horrifying and deeply tragic" as she said "vital" efforts to dismantle "dangerous and criminal smuggler gangs" and to boost border security "must proceed apace".
A vigil to remember those who died is due to take place in Calais on Wednesday evening.
More than 30 people have now died in Channel crossings so far this year, compared to 12 who are thought to have died or were recorded as missing in 2023, according to the French coastguard.
Politicians and police have expressed fears over how people smugglers are cramming more and more migrants into small boats, increasing the likelihood of fatalities when they risk the dangerous crossing.
Earlier on Wednesday, reporters on a beach in Wimereux - near the site of Tuesday's incident - described how a large group of migrants were crammed into a small dinghy, many with their legs dangling over the sides.
The boat, filmed by media for more than an hour as it slowly made its journey out to sea as passers-by walking dogs strolled on the beach, is said to have been approached by a patrol boat flying a French flag with a crew member seen tossing more life jackets to the migrants.
Meanwhile, a larger French patrol boat shadowed the dinghy from a distance.
Angele Vettorello, from Utopia 56 - which supports displaced and homeless migrants in France, told PA: "The crossings, it's not going to stop.
"Even this morning we saw more than 200 people trying to cross and have been stopped (by police).
"We see it every month... every death at the border, the people don't stop crossing."
She said a lot of police were at the shoreline, with officers intervening overnight and in the morning.
Last week was "really busy" for crossings and there had been a "huge increase" in the number of people dying in the Channel this summer, Ms Vettorello said, adding: "We know a lot of people who were stopped to cross and were back to shore during those seven days.
"We received calls from people in distress in boats in the Channel, we received for example eight calls from eight different boats on Friday."
The living conditions at the French shore are "really awful" she said, adding: "They just want to be in England."
Claiming the deaths are "kind of expected because of the politics" amid "repression and securitisation of the coast", she called for safe passage for migrants trying to reach the UK, adding: "If the politics changes here this could stop."