NCA
A UK-based people smuggler who helped organise the movement of more than 3,000 migrants as part of a £12 million illegal boat crossing operation has been jailed for 25 years.
Egyptian-born Ahmed Ebid, 42, of south west London, was involved in smuggling nearly 3,800 people on fishing boat crossings from North Africa to Italy between October 2022 and June 2023 and some of them made their way to Britain, the National Crime Agency (NCA) said.
It is believed Ebid is the first person convicted of organising boat crossings across the Mediterranean from the UK.
Ebid arrived in the UK on a small boat in 2022 after spending five years in jail in Italy for attempted drug smuggling. He applied for asylum in the UK, though he never received a decision by the British government about his claim.
At his sentencing hearing at Southwark Crown Court on Tuesday, the judge said Ebid ruthlessly exploited desperate individuals and his "primary motivation was to make money out of human trafficking".
"The treatment of migrants was horrifying," Judge Adam Hiddleston said.
"This was a commercial enterprise, pure and simple. The risk of loss of life was considerable. These were fishing boats, not ferries".
Ebid "exercised a managerial role at a very high level", the court heard, bribing officials and ordering threats of violence towards the migrants.
It is likely that Ebid will be deported once he has served his sentence.
He was arrested in 2023 after Italian security services looked into satellite phones being used by migrants on Mediterranean crossings from Libya to Europe, in particular Italy.
Some handsets were being used to call a British mobile number. The NCA linked that mobile phone to Ebid and then bugged his home to record evidence.
The agency found he was involved in a number of smuggling operations, transporting thousands of men, women and children, often in dangerously overcrowded fishing vessels.
Ebid even told an associate to kill and throw any migrants caught with their phones into the sea, in a bid to avoid law enforcement, the NCA said.