The UK government is to launch an advertising campaign which aims to deter Albanian nationals from crossing the English Channel.
Posters issued by the Home Office, the government department which handles immigration, warn that people face being “detained and removed” if they make the journey.
The department also promised to outline the “perils of the journey” in the campaign, which will run in Albanian on Facebook and Instagram.
The campaign comes as UK net migration grew to 606,000 in 2022, 164,000 higher than in 2021. Of those numbers, about 114,000 arrivals to the UK were from Ukraine following the outbreak of war.
Prime Minister Rishi Sunak believes the numbers are too high and he wants to bring them down. He has made tackling people coming across the English Channel in small boats one of his main pledges.
Immigration minister Robert Jenrick said: “We are determined to stop the boats and the campaign, launching in Albania this week, is just one component of the Home Office’s work upstream to help dispel myths about illegal travel to the UK, explain the realities and combat the lies peddled by evil people smugglers who profit from this vile trade.”
However, opposition party Labour condemned the campaign.
Shadow Home Secretary Yvette Cooper said: “It beggars belief that as Channel crossings continue to rise and the asylum system is in chaos, all the Conservatives can come up with to stop the criminal gangs is an ad campaign.
“At every turn, the Tories so-called solutions fail to meet the scale of the crisis. All they are doing is tinkering at the edges.”
Home Secretary Suella Braverman has been very publicly pushing for lower immigration.
Writing in the Sun on Sunday newspaper, she said: “This government knows that in the years to come, we cannot simply rely on foreign workers to plug gaps.
“And Brexit means we can finally build a high-skill, high-wage economy liberated from Brussels red tape.”
Speaking to Sky News on Sunday, Health Secretary Steve Barclay admitted that the “domestic supply” of nurses and doctors had to increase, but that the UK’s health service would still rely on “international recruitment”.