Illegal migrants warn of slavery hell to stop others crossing Channel

ILLEGAL migrants are being warned they face slavery if they come to Britain in small boats in a new advertising campaign.

Videos will be released in Albania over the next few weeks featuring testimony from the victims of people smuggling gangs.

Illegal migrants are being warned they face slavery if they come to Britain on small boats in a new advertising campaign

The digital ads will appear on social media and alongside online news articles.

Ministers hope they will bust the myths peddled by international criminal gangs.

And put prospective migrants off making the dangerous journey across the world’s busiest shipping lane in rubber dinghies.

Illustration of a pixelized man with text in Albanian warning about the dangers of illegal immigration.
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Illegal migrants warned they face slavery if they come to the UK on small boatsCredit: Home Office

Testimony from one migrant, whose face is obscured, reads: “I was promised a well-paid job. Instead I was a slave."

Home Office messaging warns the viewer: “Trying to enter the UK illegally could cost you everything.”

Another migrant advert says: “I owe a lot of money for the journey. They won’t say how long I need to work for or how much I owe.”

Migrants arriving at Dover port on a Border Force vessel.
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Border Force vessel carries migrants from the Channel back to Dover on Jan 13, 2025Credit: Getty

Accompanying Home Office messages warn that illegal migrants are not allowed to work in the UK and risk being exploited.

In another one a migrant reveals the threats they faced: “They said my family would be harmed if I didn’t follow instructions.”

Border Security Commander Martin Hewitt told the Sun on Sunday the ads will send a “clear message” to migrants they cannot trust smuggling gangs.

A good relationship with the Albanian Government has led to a steady drumbeat of return flights.

On Thursday 31 Albanian foreign national offenders were returned on the latest flight.

French police officers on a beach with migrants who arrived in an inflatable boat.
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French police stand on the shore after migrants failed to cross the Channel on a smuggler’s inflatable dinghy January 15, 2025.Credit: AFP

Mr Hewitt added: “This campaign helps to break the business model of these criminals and protects people from falling victim to their dangerous lies, securing our borders as part of the Government’s Plan for Change. 

“Working closely with international partners like Albania, we are targeting criminal gangs at every step, disrupting their operations across borders, and bringing perpetrators to justice.”

Migrants disembarking a Border Force vessel in Dover.
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Migrants brought in to Dover, Kent, from a Border Force vessel, January 13, 2025.Credit: PA

More than 760 people crossed the Channel last week.

On Friday, the French coastguard rescued 68 from a small boat off Calais after an engine failure.