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Albanians held in ‘debt bondage’ at drug farms to pay for Channel crossings

Albanians crossing the English Channel in small boats are being held in ‘debt bondage’ by criminal gangs and forced to work off the cost of journeys in drug farms, officials have said.The National Crime Agency (NCA) assesses that dinghies have become a cheaper alternative to the clandestine methods of staffing the ‘criminal marketplace’ – like lorries and false documents – dominant in the past.Speaking at a press conference on Tuesday, NCA senior intelligence manager Ged McCann said Albanians arriving on small boats are commonly going into either the informal ‘grey economy’, particularly construction and car washes, or working for organised criminal groups.’Illegal migration is effectively bringing in the labour force for growing cannabis,’ he added. Some of those being arrested have arrived a matter of days before on small boats.’Mr McCann said Albanian gangs were adapting supply to the demand of the UK’s ‘buoyant drug market’, particularly for cocaine, and were increasing their dominance in cannabis growing.’Cannabis farms are often staffed with illegal migrants in debt bondage,’ he added.Steve Brocklesby, an NCA intelligence manager, said the debt can be created either when criminal gangs pay another group for a person’s crossing over the English Channel, or they owe a facilitator after arranging the trip themselves.’Many times you get an OCG in the UK that has a specific requirement for an Albanian for a certain job for example a cannabis grower, and in that case they will pay a debt bond for them to come to the UK and the individual is responsible for paying it back,’ he added.Mr Brocklesby said that Albanians working in drug markets earn more money than those in unregulated legal employment in the ‘grey economy’, and that the potential earnings are considered a pull factor.The NCA estimates that hundreds of millions of pounds a year is leaving Britain for Albania, much of it from criminal enterprise, and the amount is increasing.Home Office figures show that the number of Albanians arriving in small boats has risen dramatically, from around 800 in the whole of 2021 to more than 11,000 between May and September this year.Albanians make up the second-largest nationality for asylum applications in the past year, but the NCA says many disappear from Home Office-provided hotels and accommodation.Suella Braverman language ‘fuelling xenophobia’, says Albanian PMMr Brocklesby said: ‘Previously it was all about clandestine entry – slip in on the back of HGV and don’t come into law enforcement attention at all – go into the grey economy and then potentially the criminal economy.’Now they have to register themselves [in small boat processing centres]. Once they’ve been effectively released on immigration bail they will disappear into the same grey economy or criminal world as before.’NCA officials could not definitively say whether more Albanians are now travelling to the UK for criminal purposes, or whether the use of small boats made arrivals easier to count.Mr McCann said: ‘Small boats are more visible, we don’t know how many people were coming in clandestinely by definition.’A new UK-France agreement on Channel crossings announced on Monday said the two countries would set up a ‘taskforce focused on reversing the recent rise in Albanian nationals and organised crime groups exploiting illegal migration routes into Western Europe and the UK’.The government has also been seeking to speed up the removal of Albanians who arrive on small boats and signed a readmissions deal with the country’s government last year.Work is ongoing to remove social media posts advertising journeys to the UK, which often use legal means to travel through the Schengen area to northern France, before switching to small boats often organised by Iraqi Kurds.Lesley Sutcliffe shelters from the rain next to a life-sized replica of the innermost coffin of King Tutankhamun by artist Amanda Stoner as it goes on display inside a traditional red telephone box which has been converted into a museum, in Barnsley, South YorkshirePAMembers of the hospitality sector demonstrate outside parliament in London. The head of the Confederation of British Industry is urging the UK government to relax immigration rules to help British companies with severe staff shortages, ahead of the chancellors autumn statementEPAEngland celebrate winning the men’s T20 World Cup in Melbourne Cricket Ground, AustraliaAAP Image/ReutersThe City of London Pride Group take part in the parade during the Lord Mayor’s ShowPACity workers attend a Remembrance Day ceremony at Lloyd’s of London, in the City of London, to mark Armistice Day, the anniversary of the end of the First World WarPAA grey heron lands on the river Dodder in Dublin on a sunny autumn morningPAAustralia and Spain play during the Wheelchair Rugby League World Cup group A match at the Copper Box Arena, LondonPAA migrant attempting to communicate with journalists is pinned against a fence by members of staff, before being taken out of view, at the Manston immigration short-term holding facility, located at the former Defence Fire Training and Development Centre in Thanet, KentPAHandout photo issued by Just Stop Oil of a protester who has climbed a gantry on the M25 between junctions six and seven in Surrey, leading to the closure of the motorwayPAA grey seal with its pup, at the Donna Nook National Nature Reserve in north Lincolnshire, where they come every year in late October, November and December to give birth to their pups near the sand dunes, the wildlife spectacle attracts visitors from across the UKPADemonstrators with placards calling for a General Election march near the Houses of ParliamentAFP via Getty ImagesA peacock is seen in the early winter sunshine in the Dutch Gardens in Holland Park AFP via Getty ImagesFlorence Kasumba, Letitia Wright, Tenoch Huerta and Lupita Nyong’o attend the European Premiere of Black Panther: Wakanda Forever in LondonGettyA red squirrel gathers nuts in Pitlochry, ScotlandReutersEngland’s Tara-Jane Stanley scores their side’s seventh try against Brazil during the Women’s Rugby League World Cup group A match at Headingley Stadium, LeedsPAGB’s James Hall competes during the men’s parallel bars qualification at the World Gymnastics Championships in LiverpoolAFP/GettyPeople dressed in Halloween costumes paddle board along the river Avon in Christchurch, DorsetPAMembers of the public take pictures as police officers remove activists from a road during a ‘Just Stop Oil’ protest, in LondonReutersA cosplayer attends the MCM Comic Con London 2022 at the ExCel Centre in LondonReuters98-year-old D-Day Veteran Bernard Morgan, whose story is among those featured on the giant poppy wall, during the launch of The Royal British Legion 2022 Poppy Appeal, at Hay’s Galleria in central LondonPAA meerkat explores a pumpkin in the enclosure at Wild Place, Bristol, where some of the animals are having pumpkin treats as part of their environmental enrichmentPAKing Charles III welcomes Rishi Sunak during an audience at Buckingham Palace, where he invited the newly elected leader of the Conservative Party to become Prime Minister and form a new governmentPARishi Sunak celebrates with Tory MPs outside the Conservative Campaign Headquarters after becoming the new leader of the Conservative PartyReutersThe Green Man at October Plenty, Borough Market’s annual Autumn Harvest festival, in London, which returns for the first time post pandemicPASculptor Peter McKenna puts the finishing touches to a pumpkin that will form part of the ‘Planet A’ Hebden Bridge Pumpkin Trail in the West Yorkshire townPABritain’s Prime Minister Liz Truss delivers a speech outside of 10 Downing Street in central London to announce her resignationAFP/GettySalmon leap up Stainforth Force on the River Ribble in the Yorkshire Dales as they swim upriver to their spawning grounds during the annual Salmon migrationPAJust Stop Oil protesters continue their protest for a second day on the Queen Elizabeth II Bridge, which links Kent and Essex and which remains closed for traffic, after it was scaled by two climbers from the groupPAHundreds of students take part in the traditional Raisin Monday foam fight on St Salvator’s Lower College Lawn at the University of St Andrews in FifePAA protester holds a placard during a march into central London at a demonstration by the climate change protest group Extinction RebellionAFP/GettyA member of the public drags an activist who is blocking the road during a “Just Stop Oil” protest, in London, BritainREUTERSGermany’s Women’s double skulls during day one of the World Rowing Beach Sprint Finals at Saundersfoot beach, PembrokeshirePAFamily and mourners arrive at St Michael’s Church, in Creeslough, for the funeral mass of 49-year-old mother of four Martina Martin, who died following an explosion at the Applegreen service station in the village of Creeslough in Co Donegal on FridayPAMotorists in Coventry pass trees showing autumnal colourPAA woman and her dog in the the North Sea at Tynemouth Longsands beach before sunrisePAPolice officers remove a campaigner from a Just Stop Oil protest on The Mall, near Buckingham Palace, LondonPAA drummer plays during the Diwali on the Square celebration, in Trafalgar Square, LondonPATimothee Chalamet attending the UK premiere of Bones and All during the BFI London Film Festival 2022 at the Royal Festival Hall, Southbank Centre, LondonPATwo young male fallow deer lock antlers in Dublin’s Phoenix park as rutting season beginsPAThe Princess of Wales during a cocktail making competition during a visit to Trademarket, a new outdoor street-food and retail market situated in Belfast city centre, as part of the royal visit to Northern IrelandPAGreenpeace protesters interrupt Prime Minister Liz Truss as she delivers her keynote speech to the Conservative Party annual conferencePAPrime Minister Liz Truss and Britain’s Chancellor of the Exchequer Kwasi Kwarteng wearing hard hats and hi-vis jackets, visit a construction site for a medical innovation campus in BirminghamAFP/GettyBritish artist Sam Cox, aka Mr Doodle, reveals the Doodle House, a twelve-room mansion at Tenterden, in Kent, which has been covered, inside and out in the artist’s trademark monochrome, cartoonish hand-drawn doodlesPAErling Haaland celebrates after scoring Manchester City’s second goal against Manchester United at Etihad Stadium. Haaland went on to score a hattrick, his third of the season in the Premier League. City beat United 6-3.Manchester City FC/GettyProtesters hold up flags and placards at a protest in London. A variety of protest groups including Enough is Enough, Don’t Pay and Just Stop Oil all demonstrated on the dayAFP/GettyBritish Prime Minister Liz Truss, who has not been seen in days, leaves the back of Downing Street after a meeting with Office For Budget Responsibility following the release of her government’s mini-budgetGettyThe Virginia creeper foliage on the Tu Hwnt i’r Bont (Beyond the Bridge) Llanwrst, Conwy North Wales, has changed colour from green to red in at the start of Autumn. The building was built in 1480 as a residential dwelling but has been a tearoom for over 50 yearsPACriminal barristers from the Criminal Bar Association (CBA), demonstrates outside the Royal Courts of Justice in London, as part of their ongoing pay row with the GovernmentPADavid White, Garter King of Arms, poses with an envelope franked with the new cypher of King Charles III ‘CIIIR’, after it was printed in the Court Post Office at Buckingham Palace in central LondonAFP/GettyA gallery staff member poses next to a painting by Lucian Freud – Self-portrait (Fragment), 1956 – on show at a photocall for the Credit Suisse exhibition – Lucian Freud: New Perspectives at the National Gallery in LondonPAAndrea Wilson, the NCA deputy director responsible for small boats, said the agency has a ‘very strong relationship with Albanian law enforcement’ and is running more than 70 live operations into Albanian-linked gangs across different areas of serious crime.’It’s important to stress that not all UK organised crime is dominated by Albanians,’ she told the press conference. ‘There are a lot of A who come here with legitimate reasons, who want to work here and have a better life … they do not have a monopoly on serious organised crime in the UK.’The NCA said it had been receiving anecdotal reports from police officers that Albanian suspects arrested at cannabis farms and on drugs raids were then making claims of modern slavery and trafficking.Mr Brocklesby said some were ‘manipulating’ the National Referral Mechanism, which gives people support while their claims are assessed, and may be coached on how the scheme works before leaving Albania.He added that some police forces believe they have received ‘standard letters’ from several people, and the accounts being given by others were disproved.Ms Wilson confirmed that the NCA was seeing ‘suspected abuse’ of the NRM at the point of arrest, adding: ‘We are concerned that people are abusing that system to stay in the UK and commit crime.’The home secretary has also made claims that the NRM is being misused by small boat migrants, but when an MP asked the Home Office for figures on the reported exploitation the Home Office did not provide any data.

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