Eight migrants have died while trying to cross the English Channel overnight.
The French maritime prefecture for the English Channel and the North Sea said 53 migrants were on board a boat which got into difficulty off the coast of Ambleteuse in the Pas-de-Calais region of northern France.
A rescue operation was launched but eight people were confirmed dead, the prefecture said in a statement.
Jacques Billant, the prefect of Pas-de-Calais, told French media on Sunday that six people were taken to hospital “in relative emergency,” including a 10-month-old baby with hypothermia.
Survivors of the accident come from Eritrea, Sudan, Syria, Afghanistan, Egypt and Iran, he added.
A UK government spokesperson said French authorities are leading the investigation.
“We can confirm there has been an incident in the Channel involving a small boat in French waters,” the spokesperson said.
“French authorities are leading the response and investigation. We will not be commenting further at this stage.”
British Red Cross said the deaths were “tragic”, as the charity organisation called for more safe crossing routes for migrants.
“Nobody risks their life travelling across the Channel in a small boat unless they feel they have no other choice,” the director for refugee support, Alex Fraser, said.
“More safe routes are urgently needed to help prevent people from taking dangerous journeys to reach the UK.”
It comes less than two weeks after 12 migrants died when their boat sank trying to cross the Channel.
A pregnant woman and six children were among those killed in the incident on September 3rd, with up to 65 people rescued off the coast of Cap Gris-Nez.
More than 30 people have died in Channel crossings so far this year.
Before this month, the French coastguard had recorded at least 19 Channel crossing deaths in 2024, including nine since the start of July. Last year, 12 migrants are thought to have died or were recorded as missing.
Responding to reports of the deaths, UK foreign secretary David Lammy said: “It’s awful. It’s a further loss of life.”
He told the BBC’s Sunday With Laura Kuenssberg programme he had been to the National Crime Agency and seen the “awful sort of rubber dinghies that people are coming across the Channel with, many of them, of course, not able to make it in these contraptions”.
The UK government has been “discussing how we go after those gangs, in co-operation upstream with other European partners”, he added.
Sir Keir Starmer will be in Italy on Monday for talks with counterpart Giorgia Meloni about her efforts to tackle the problem “and the work they have done, particularly, with Albania”.
The UK prime minister has said he is interested in the rollout of the policy, under which Tirana will accept asylum seekers on Italy’s behalf while their claims are processed.
On Saturday, French maritime authorities said more than 200 people were rescued in the Channel in a 24-hour period from Friday to Saturday.
Some 22,440 people have crossed the Channel so far this year, with nearly 9,000 having made the crossing since the general election.