More Than 500 Migrants Cross English Channel in One Day as UK Eyes Danish-Style Reform
A surge in small-boat arrivals coincides with the UK government’s plan to overhaul asylum rules modelled on Denmark’s system
A total of 503 migrants crossed the English Channel in a single day as the United Kingdom moves to reshape its immigration and asylum framework based on Denmark’s restrictive model.
The arrivals came on Saturday in seven small boats, with further crossings reported on Sunday, bringing the number for the past three days to 1,772 and the year-to-date total to 38,726.
The figure compares with 32,119 crossings by the same date in 2024 and 26,699 in 2023, marking a sharp upward trend in illegal sea arrivals.
Home Secretary Shabana Mahmood has sent officials to Denmark to study its border-control and asylum policy, which has successfully driven asylum claims to a forty-year low.
The Danish system under review limits family-reunification routes, grants only temporary protection in many cases and processes claims in offshore or remote jurisdictions.
British ministers say they are considering adopting elements of this regime to “reduce incentives” for irregular migration and make it “easier to remove those found to have no right to stay”.
In September the Home Office suspended new applications under the Refugee Family Reunion scheme pending new rules.
The government says it will announce detailed reforms later this month and has pledged to use “whatever it takes” to regain control of Britain’s borders.
Political reactions have already emerged: some Labour backbench MPs warn that the proposed Danish-style approach is “too hardcore” and could evoke echoes of far-right policy, while the Reform UK party has seized on the surge of crossings to claim the government has lost control of the issue.
Meanwhile, the daily crossing figure underlines the urgency confronting ministers as they prepare to launch their immigration shake-up amid rising public concern and escalating small-boat arrivals.