Suspected people smugglers are to be treated like terrorists under Labour's new government - as Sir Keir Starmer launches his own crackdown on illegal migrant crossings after scrapping the Rwanda scheme.
The new legislation, due to be set out in Sir Keir's first King's Speech next week, will give the police, Border Force and intelligence officers to use serious crime prevention orders against people smugglers.
They enable officials to place tough sanctions on travel in the UK or abroad as well as on their access to the internet and their finances. Breaching the order can result in up to five years in jail.
The order can be applied both before a suspected people smuggler is convicted or if they are found guilty. It has previously been restricted to terrorists but will be extended to immigration crime, The Telegraph reports.
It comes as the first migrants to cross the Channel since Labour's election victory arrived in the UK on Monday.
Border officials are also set to be given enhanced stop and search powers under the 2000 Terrorism act for anyone suspected of people smuggling.
Sir Keir Starmer is launching his own crackdown on illegal migrant crossings after scrapping the Rwanda scheme
It comes as the first migrants to cross the Channel since Labour's election victory arrived in the UK on Monday
Usually with stop and searches, police must have 'genuine and objectively reasonable suspicion' that they are going to find a weapon or item such as drugs. Enhanced powers enables officers to seize mobile phones and copy data on devices of any suspects.
Like terrorism laws, police could get warrants to search properties belonging to people smugglers and seize items before an offence was committed.
'By replicating this power for organised immigration crime, we can ensure that investigators can raid and seize relevant information and property from addresses linked to people smuggling before an offence has taken place,' a policy document said seen by the Telegraph.
Hundreds of police officers will be deployed across Europe to crackdown on people smugglers.
New Home Secretary Yvette Cooper is searching for a former police, military or intelligence chief to head the new UK Border Security Command.
Neil Basu, a former head of UK counter-terrorism policing, is one of the frontrunners.
It comes as Rwanda said it had 'fully upheld its side of the agreement' after Sir Keir confirmed the controversial deportation policy pushed so heavily by the Conservatives is to be scrapped.
In a statement on Monday, a spokesperson in Kigali said they 'take note' of the UK Government's plan to axe the multimillion-pound agreement, which Rishi Sunak had set up in an effort to deter migrants from crossing the English Channel.
New Home Secretary Yvette Cooper is searching for a former police, military or intelligence chief to head the new UK Border Security Command
On Monday, groups of migrants were seen arriving from France wearing life jackets, and some wrapped in blankets
Border Force were deployed to pick up migrants in the Channel on Monday afternoon
On Saturday, Sir Keir described the Migration and Economic Development Partnership (MEDP) with the African nation as being 'dead and buried before it started'.
The statement from Rwanda comes after the first migrants to cross the Channel since Labour's General Election victory arrived in the UK, adding to the 13,574 already recorded by the Home Office to make the journey this year.
A Rwandan government spokesperson said: 'Rwanda takes note of the intention of the UK Government to terminate the Migration and Economic Development Partnership Agreement, as provided for under the terms of the treaty passed by both our parliaments.
'This partnership was initiated by the government of the UK in order to address the crisis of irregular migration affecting the UK - a problem of the UK, not Rwanda.
'Rwanda has fully upheld its side of the agreement, including with regard to finances, and remains committed to finding solutions to the global migration crisis, including providing safety, dignity and opportunity to refugees and migrants who come to our country.'
Labour committed to scrapping the Rwanda scheme in its winning manifesto.
The Tories had pledged a 'regular rhythm of flights every month' to Rwanda in their election offering, but the previous government had refused to say how much more money - on top of £290 million already committed - the UK had agreed to pay Rwanda as part of the deal.
Figures obtained in 2023 using the Freedom of Information Act revealed a further £2.1 million spent fighting legal challenges to the plan.
A spokesperson for Sir Keir told reporters earlier on Monday: 'We're getting to work straight away because we know that this summer will be challenging.'
The Government is 'now focused on the work needed to secure our borders and smash the gangs', he added.
Over the weekend, the Prime Minister said he was 'not prepared to continue with gimmicks' as Labour announced plans to free the last two migrants who were detained ahead of anticipated flights.
'Look at the numbers that have come over in the first six-and-a-bit months of this year, they are record numbers - that is the problem that we are inheriting,' Sir Keir added.
'The Rwanda scheme was dead and buried before it started. It's never been a deterrent.'
According to the MEDP, either government could have axed the agreement, but it will only formally end three months after the other party is notified in writing.
It would have lasted until April 13 2027, had the UK Government not signalled its end.
It enabled the Government to send migrants who did not have a right to remain in the country to Rwanda if they had 'arrived in the UK through an illegal and dangerous route' since 2022.
The 13,574 arrivals so far in 2024 is a record for the first six months of a calendar year.
It is also 12 per cent higher than the number recorded by the same time last year (12,119) and up 3 per cent on the same period in 2022 (13,149), according to PA news agency analysis of government data.
Ms Cooper said while visiting police officers in Lewisham, London: 'We need to clear the Conservatives' asylum backlog, but the first priority has to be to get the stronger border security in place, and that is why our first step is setting up the new Border Security Command.'
On the campaign trail before last week's election, former prime minister Mr Sunak described Labour's pledges as 'an illegal migration amnesty and sweetheart deal with the European Union that would see Britain taking even more illegal migrants from the continent'.