ASYLUM SEEKERSThere's
been an explosion in the number of asylum seekers trying to enter
Kent illegally over the last decade. Over
70,000 asylum seekers fled to Britain in the hope of getting sanctuary
last year. Many
of them stowaway in the backs of lorries entering the UK on cross
Channel ferries and the Channel Tunnel. It's
a dangerous game... Two years ago, 58 Chinese men were discovered
dead in the back of a lorry. They had suffocated whilst being smuggled
across the Channel. Crossing
the borderInside
Out decided to see how easy or hard it is to break into Britain. | Inside
Out smuggled presenter Paul Ross on board a cross-Channel lorry |
We
succeeded in smuggling our presenter, Paul Ross, onto a cross-Channel
lorry for five hours, without detection. So
why is it relatively easy for stowaways to slip through the border
controls undetected? Many
asylum seekers slip through holes in fences, hide in lorries, and
conceal themselves on freight trains. But
if the stowaways are getting cleverer so are the methods for detecting
them. Train
companies and the police are using sophisticated detection devices
including equipment that can identify a human breathing in a lorry. Crossing
the borderThe
asylum seeker's story starts far from Kent on the other side of
the world. Here's
our guide to the main groups of asylum seekers seeking sanctuary. - Afghanistan
- 9,190
last year
- Somalia
- 6,500
last year
- Iran
- 3,450
last year
- Zimbabwe
- 2,085
last year
- China
- 2,415
last year
- Sri
Lanka
- 5,545
last year
- Turkey
- 3,740
last year
- FR
Yugoslavia
- 3,190
last year
- Iraq
- 6,805
last year
The
main reasons that asylum seekers give for looking for refuge are: - fleeing
political or religious persecution, torture and repressive regimes
- economic
reasons - trying to find work
- escaping
from conflict and war
- searching
for a better life, escaping from poverty and unemployment
Many
asylum seekers arrive to a mixed reception. It's sometimes hard
to differentiate between genuine refugees and illegal immigrants. Illegal
crossingsMany
refugees from all over the world find themselves at the Red Cross
camp at Sangatte in France. They
make repeated attempts each night to get on board trains bound for
Britain. There have been dozens of incidents .. - 10
May 2002
- 300
asylum seekers
attack the yard at Frethun in France - 27
January 2002
- French
police arrest five Romanians suspected of tampering with railway
signals so asylum seekers could get on board trains
- 25
December 2001
- 150
caught inside the Tunnel
- 6
November 2001
- 74
asylum seekers found hiding on freight trains travelling through
the Tunnel
- 30
October 2001
- 154
arrested at Calais freight terminal
- 2
September 2001
- 100
refugees caught in the Coquelles compound in France
- 31
August 2001
- 80
refugees caught in Coquelles compound
- 30
August 2001
- 44
refugees held after walking into the Tunnel
- June
2000
- 58
Chinese asylum seekers found dead in lorry container
The
refugees target the marshalling yard at Frethun as well as the main
Eurotunnel complex at Coquelles. They
cut through fencing and use diversionary tactics to get inside trucks
and trains. Once
there, they hide on the top of wagons and in between carriages of
cargo trains bound for Britain. Several
have died trying to ride the trains. What
can be done?Measures
to prevent asylum seekers breaking into Kent have been stepped up. Extra
policing, hi-tec security and special security teams are making
a difference. But
the root causes of the asylum problem still remain. Until
the bigger problems of asylum seekers are tackled, it's
clear that the problem isn't likely to go away. |