Storing migrant boats has cost the taxpayer £500,000 in a year
Britain has spent about half a million pounds in the past year storing small boats used by migrants to cross the Channel, according to internal government estimates.
Legislation requires the state to
keep the boats for 12 months in case an owner comes forward to claim them.
Government sources said that
nobody had come forward to claim a single one of the boats in the past year,
which they said was unsurprising given that they are bought by people smugglers
for single-use journeys across the Channel.
After a year has lapsed, many
boats are no longer seaworthy and cannot be repurposed for good causes, leaving
officials with no choice but to dispose of them.
Ministers are expected to reverse
the “absurd” law this year, allowing Border Force to sell the boats or
donate them to charity if they are seaworthy, a source said.
Hundreds of
boats have been seized by Border Force this year after people smugglers used
them to ferry 10,525 migrants across the Channel.
The boats are
initially stored in a fenced-off compound in Dover before being transported to
storage depots known as Queen’s Warehouses because goods stored there become
“forfeit to the Crown”. The secure locations are used to store material that
has been seized or detained by Border Force, HM Revenue and Customs and the
National Crime Agency.
Examples of
goods seized at the border include firearms, prohibited drugs, and excise goods
such as cigarettes, tobacco and alcohol.
The storage of
hundreds of boats, which are much larger than other goods stored at the
warehouses, has increased costs, which are met by the taxpayer.
An internal
estimate of how much it costs to transport, store and dispose of the small
boats that have been seized by Border Force has been put at £500,000 a year, a
source told The Times.
Under Section 26
of the UK Borders Act 2007 and the Immigration Disposal of Property Regulations
2008, goods must be stored at Queen’s Warehouses for 12 months.
Some boats are kept longer in case they are needed as evidence to prosecute
people smugglers after investigations by the police or the National Crime
Agency.
The Nationality
and Borders Bill, which is going through parliament, will remove this section
of the law, making it no longer applicable to “ships or other property”.
Instead, the
boats will be sold to raise money for charities or donated to organisations
such as the Sea Cadets if they are deemed safe.
Some money
raised could go to “recouping the costs of running the asylum system”, a source
said, citing Home Office figures showing that it has risen to more than £1
billion a year — the highest amount in two decades.
Peter Bone, the
Conservative MP, said that spending £500,000 a year on storing the boats was “a
complete waste of money”.
“What people
smuggler is going to turn up at the Home Office and say, ‘You’ve got my boat,
please can I have it back?’ ” he said.
“Rather than
clogging up warehouses costing us half a million a year, let’s sell them off to
raise money to charities fighting human trafficking or give them to the RNLI.”
A Home Office
official said: “Any boats that may be used as evidence to prosecute vile people
smugglers are stored as investigations continue.
“Current
legislation also obliges us to keep items for a short period in case an owner
wishes to claim them.
“New laws in the
Nationality and Borders Bill will enable us to dispose of vessels much quicker
or where suitable donate them to worthy causes in the UK.”