Albanians pay over 43m euros for traffickers entering Britain with gomons in January-September 2022

Ergys, a young man from Matti, who was previously working in Italy, spent 5,000 thousand euros on savings held at an Albanian bank to spend with goons from France to Britain to join his peers from Albania, who are already in London. He said [...]
He said he paid with 3,500 pounds of traffickers to cross the Lamansh channel in April 2022.
That day, “has been launched by France 12 gomones to Britain. There were 70 people in our tire. There were also women, even two young children. Nearly 60 of us were Albanians. A 30 - year - old girl from Shkodra led the boat. This was driven by “google of line”, it was very good that it took us three and a half hours. We were lucky that the others stayed 24 hours in the water because they didn't know how to navigate. All the time, there was a fear. Everybody paid 3,500 pounds. We were told that during 2021 it has been a little cheaper, but with the demand from Albanians rising well in 2022, even prices have increased”.
I chose this way because the truck costs too much now, it's got 25 thousand pounds. “That's how a cousin of mine paid for the fobi of water” said Ergys.
An illegal migration network from Albania to Great Britain is depleting every country more from human capital, but in addition to that, the displaced take away large sums of money, most of which go to pay the traffickers.
British media and official immigration statistics show that in the 9th month of 2022, January-September demanded asylum in Britain over 13 thousand Albanians, where 11,000 of them entered with burmons.
The average payment for the transition has been from 3-4 thousand pounds per person depending on the days.
Taking into consideration official reports of Albanian immigrants entering Britain with gomones and payments per person, traffickers have earned around 38.5m pounds (43m euros) payments solely from Albanian immigrants for the 9-month 2022.
More detailed information from high - immigration circuits to Britain shows that young people are often used and even credit channels to cover travel expenses.
In Kukes County, microloan agencies faced an unusual request for loans used for migration. This service has worked because many have repaid the loan after leaving.
In other cases the amounts were borrowed from relatives, with savings from their jobs, but there was another way of financing, Drini claims, one of many young people gone. He said that young people often pay for the web of growing grass homes.
Drini, a young man from Tropoja, said he worked nearly three months at grasshouses in London until the obligation went off and has now chosen to focus on legal work. Drini had finished high studies in Tirana, but it was impossible to find a job to pay over 50 thousand dollars in Tirana. That amount was not enough to start life. /Monitor. al












