On 24 November 2021, an
inflatable dinghy, carrying 30 migrants across the English Channel from France to the UK, capsized whilst still in French
territorial waters near
Calais and
Dunkirk. Twenty-seven people were found dead, while two others survived and were rescued, and another is still missing. Sixteen of the victims were identified as
Kurdish people from
Iraqi Kurdistan, including ten men, four women and two children; four more were Afghan men, three
Ethiopians, one Kurdish man from
Iran, a
Somali woman, one
Vietnamese man, and an
Egyptian man. Four suspected
smugglers were arrested shortly after. A
Dover-based fisherman described to
The Telegraph how he thought French vessels did not respond to
Mayday calls from the French coastguard to attend the incident in French waters about off Calais. He said that the alarm was raised at about 1pm and that there were about 15-20 large French fishing vessels off Calais at the time which did not respond. On the other hand, boats from
HM Coastguard at Dover and the
British Border Force's vessel
BF Hurricane arrived on the scene around 45 minutes later. On 28 November, one of the two survivors was reported by
Rudaw to have said that after their boat began to deflate they called the French authorities for help, but were told they were in British waters, so they called British authorities, but no one came to help. This was confirmed by the numerous records of the telephone calls and the testimonies of the victims' relatives and in November 2022, by elements from the French official enquiry. The UK
Maritime and Coastguard Agency said that on 24 November they had received "more than 90 alerts, including 999 emergency calls, from the English Channel" and had responded to all of the calls. However, a Guardian investigation reported that in the lead up to the disaster, hundreds of migrants were "left adrift" in the channel with no assistance. "Around 440 people appear to have been left adrift after the coastguard sent no rescue vessels to 19 reported boats carrying migrants in UK waters, according to an analysis of internal records and marine data seen by the
Observer and
Liberty Investigates. Experts said the failure to act appears to breach international law." Meanwhile, an investigation by The Independent found that "It took the UK and French coastguards 12 hours to respond following the first mayday call, with the authorities arguing over who was responsible. By the time rescue vessels and aircraft arrived at the scene, all but two of the passengers had drowned and died of exposure." ==Inquiries==