Officers will collect intelligence and coordinate joint operations to combat criminals trafficking migrants
International crime fighting teams including British officers are to be deployed against people smuggling gangs in migration hotspots under a new G7 “action” plan announced on Friday.
At a three-day meeting in Italy, Yvette Cooper, the Home Secretary, and her G7 counterparts agreed to establish a network of law enforcement officers based in source countries from which the migrants originate and in “transit” nations through which they travel to stem the flow and crackdown on the gangs.
The officers would be responsible for collecting and sharing intelligence on the gangs and co-ordinating joint operations involving border and law enforcement agencies from the G7 to identify and combat the criminals trafficking migrants.
It will include UK National Crime Agency (NCA) and Border Force officers.
The move reflects increased efforts by the UK and other EU nations to tackle the problem “upstream” before migrants reach southern Europe or the Channel by turning them back at sea in the Mediterranean and disrupting the gangs’ supply chains for small boats.
Britain has already deployed more Border Force and NCA officers to Europol as well as “transit” countries such as northern France, Italy, Romania, Bulgaria, Austria and Albania and “source” countries in Africa and south-east Asia.
The moves are part of a five-point “action” plan agreed by the G7 interior ministers from the UK, France, Germany, Italy, the US, Canada and Japan – with EU representatives also present.
It also includes commitments to negotiate more returns agreements so that illegal migrants can be deported once they reach G7 countries and get social media companies to do more to remove adverts by organised crime gangs promoting their smuggling services.