Image credit: National Crime Agency
Licensed Taxi Drivers Jailed for Role in Cross-Channel Migrant Smuggling Ring
A sophisticated people-smuggling operation, which used London’s licensed taxi network as a logistical cover to move migrants towards the English Channel, has been dismantled following a National Crime Agency (NCA) investigation. Four taxi drivers have been sentenced for their part in the conspiracy, which funneled individuals towards freight vehicles bound for mainland Europe.
The Smuggling Network and Its Organizer
The operation was coordinated by Madjid Belabes, 54, who was previously sentenced to 10 years and nine months in prison for people smuggling and money laundering. Prosecutors established that between December 2022 and September 2023, Belabes charged migrants approximately £1,200 each and orchestrated at least 26 attempted crossings. His enterprise generated an estimated £290,000. A stark example of the operation’s scale occurred when French authorities discovered 58 migrants from Algeria, Tunisia, and Morocco concealed in a lorry trailer after it had departed from the UK.
Exploiting Legitimate Transport Services
Belabes deliberately recruited licensed taxi drivers to transport migrants from collection points in London to designated lay-bys and service stations in Kent. This method provided a layer of legitimacy; a vehicle carrying several passengers could be plausibly explained as a legitimate taxi service if stopped by police. The drivers admitted to making multiple trips as part of the organised crime group.
Investigators built their case through digital and physical evidence. Call and text records from mobile phones directly linked the drivers to Belabes. Furthermore, CCTV footage captured one driver, Mourad Bouchlaghem, meeting with Belabes in London and loading migrants into his vehicle, with other drivers present during exchanges. A fifth individual, Said Bouazza, 56, was convicted by a jury after making a
Image Credit: www.taxi-point.co.uk
