Iranian asylum seeker relives ‘miracle’ of boat rescue in Channel

Iranian asylum seeker relives ‘miracle’ of boat rescue in Channel

An Iranian asylum seeker who spent eight hours clinging to a dinghy battered by rough waves in the English Channel has relived the “miracle” of his rescue.

Ali, whose name has been changed to protect his identity, attempted the perilous crossing from Calais to England with seven others in December.

But the 26-year-old thought he would die in the Channel and never see France nor England when the weather worsened and they lost control of the dinghy in the rough water.

Ali from Iran
Ali spent eight hours attempting to cross rough seas by a small boat (Gareth Fuller/PA)

“And you just go with the waves, you don’t have any choice.

“It’s very, very dangerous. I saw with my eyes, one-metre, maybe two-metre high waves.”

Ali said he was warned by friends not to try to cross by boat as it was too dangerous – a “bad memory” at the forefront of his mind as the group, including a family, clung to the tiny boat.

Explaining his terror, he said: “We are lost in ocean for eight hours … we don’t have a chance, never, never the police will find us, because we didn’t have a phone in the ocean and we didn’t have any sign, and after eight hours, finally, I think it’s a miracle – the police find us.”

Calais
A view of the beach in Calais (Gareth Fuller/PA)

Last year, more than 500 migrants tried to travel to the UK on small vessels, with four in five of them attempting the journey in the final three months of 2018.

Around 90 people attempted the trip in January, according to the Home Office, and on Monday a boat of 34 people including women and children was intercepted by the UK Border Force and brought to Dover.

Ali said his group were first discovered by a boat with UK flags, but within minutes a French boat arrived and took them back to France.

Speaking at a rubbish tip near to where he sleeps, Ali said he left Iran because he was in danger after protesting against the government.

Calais
A tent used by migrants in Calais, France (Gareth Fuller/PA)

Believing Ali would be executed for his views, his father paid a smuggler £15,000 to take him from Iran to England.

After three weeks he reached Calais, where the smuggler asked for more money, disappearing when he learned there was no more.

Ali is now concerned he may be tracked down in Europe.

He said he tries every day to reach the safety of England, opting to try to stow away on lorries without being sure of their destination because “it’s safe. Maybe you go to Germany but this means you’re alive”.

Ali from Iran
Ali describes the conditions he faces living in Calais (Gareth Fuller/PA)

He said: “I stay here for more than four months and every night I try, maybe I get to UK … because my sister and my brother live there and the UK is safe for me, because more than four months I try but I can’t get to the UK.

“It means it’s good, it’s safe for me, but I arrived in France easily and it means they can find me here.”

Asked how he would feel to make it to England, he said: “I’m happy because I arrived in a safe place and my enemy can’t find me and can’t kill me and I can one night sleep very well without stress.”

He added: “I try, I am sure, one day I can get there. I am sure.”

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