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Two men jailed for smuggling 18 Albanians into Britain | Two men jailed for smuggling 18 Albanians into Britain |
(35 minutes later) | |
Two men have each been jailed for more than four years for smuggling 18 Albanian migrants into the UK. | Two men have each been jailed for more than four years for smuggling 18 Albanian migrants into the UK. |
They were caught as the group, including two children, were rescued from their sinking inflatable boat a mile-and-a-half off Kent in May. | They were caught as the group, including two children, were rescued from their sinking inflatable boat a mile-and-a-half off Kent in May. |
Immigration officials said the Albanians were in a "perilous" state without life jackets and facing potential death. | Immigration officials said the Albanians were in a "perilous" state without life jackets and facing potential death. |
Each of the migrants had paid £5,000 to make the trip | Each of the migrants had paid £5,000 to make the trip |
At Maidstone Crown Court, Robert Stilwell, 33, a former judo champion from Greenhithe, Kent, was jailed for four years and four months | |
Mark Stribling, 35, from Farningham, Kent, was jailed for four years and eight months. | |
Both had pleaded guilty at an earlier hearing to conspiracy to assist unlawful immigration into the UK. | |
'Commodities' | |
The court was told they were hired by others and were each paid £2,000 to make the trip. | |
The judge said a tragedy had been avoided by a whisker. | The judge said a tragedy had been avoided by a whisker. |
They initially told the authorities they had been fishing and had rescued the migrants. | |
Dave Fairclough, who led the immigration enforcement investigation, said: "This was a particularly callous attempt to smuggle people into the UK. | |
"We often talk about people smugglers treating individuals as commodities. To my mind, that is exactly how Stilwell and Stribling regarded their passengers. | |
"They were not human beings, they were cargo, and as such did not merit life jackets for a dangerous night crossing, in poor conditions in one of the busiest shipping lanes in the world." |