Ruthless smugglers threatened to shoot migrants – including a bride-to-be – unless they boarded the overcrowded dinghy that went down in the Channel this week, friends said yesterday.

Up to 50 people were supposed to board two boats ahead of the fatal voyage – but one vessel suffered engine trouble, those stuck in camps in claimed.

Rather than curtail the trip that would have netted them tens of thousands of pounds, the gun-toting gang corralled the migrants into one boat, it was said.

The chilling details emerged as more were named among those feared drowned in Wednesday’s tragedy off the coast of Calais.

The first confirmed dead was 24-year-old student Mariam Nouri Dargalayi, who was recently engaged and was trying to reach her fiance in Britain. 

It comes as Emmanuel Macron’s outburst at Boris Johnson yesterday over the death of 27 migrants in the Channel could lead to more lives lost.

In an extraordinary fit of pique, the French government withdrew Priti Patel’s invitation to a crisis meeting tomorrow after the Prime Minister published a five-point action plan.

President Macron accused the PM of breaking protocol by tweeting an open letter to him after three children, seven women and 17 men died when their dinghy sank off Calais on Wednesday.

Smugglers threatened to shoot migrants, including bride-to-be Mariam Nouri Dargalayi (pictured with fiance), unless they boarded the doomed dinghy that went down in Channel

Known to her family as Baran, she travelled from northern Iraq via Germany to the French coast.

Fiance Karzan Asad, who is said to have British citizenship and is now working as a barber in Bournemouth, said: ‘I am in a very bad state.It is very sad for me, and for everyone.

‘I had continuous contact with my wife and I was tracking her live with GPS. After four hours and 18 minutes, from the moment she went into that boat, I think they were in the middle of the sea, then I lost her.

‘She was a happy person. Someone went to see her body in France, so I know it’s her.’

Last night a cousin in Iraq, Krmanj Ezzat, said: ‘Her mother and father are totally devastated. The situation is just awful. She was a woman in the prime of her life. It’s a total tragedy and bulk load index the whole family are in shock. 

‘I understand why so many people are leaving for a better life, but this is not the correct path.It’s the route of death. Please don’t take this route, it’s not worth it.

‘Baran chose a very difficult way to come to Britain and you see what happened to her. Karzan was waiting for her in England. She was learning English, she was very smart.’

Mr Ezzat fears four more family members were also on the boat.

Shakar Ali, 25, (left) and Harem Pirot, 23, (right) who grew up as neighbours in Iraq and set off together to find a new life in the UK are believed to have been on board the dinghy

Yesterday, the family of Deniz Ahmed Mohammed, bulk density index a 27-year-old Kurd, said he left them a final voicemail saying: ‘Just pray for us.’

Childhood friends Harem Pirot and Shakar Ali, from the town of Ranya, northern Iraq, were also among the feared victims.

Their friend Sanger Ahmed said: ‘I spoke to them on the phone on the morning they went.They were saying it was only a tiny boat and people smugglers might shoot people if they tried to back out.

‘They suspected the boat was overcrowded with around 50 people on it. I think they could have been forced on the boat.

‘People smugglers are armed and don’t care if the boat is overloaded or if the weather is bad.We have all heard the stories about people being threatened with a gun unless they get on.’

In the squalid camp near Dunkirk, where the doomed migrants waited for a chance to attempt the crossing, numerous sources have made shocking claims to the Daily Mail about what happened on Wednesday lunchtime. 

Two boats had been set to leave from the Loon-Plage beach, just outside Dunkirk.Sources described how one of the boats had suffered engine problems, yet the greedy smugglers did not want to miss out on their cash windfall.

‘The smugglers told the migrants that the remaining boat was completely new and so it would be strong enough to carry all of them,’ said one source inside the camp.

Another migrant said: ‘It is all about money for them.There are too many people who have too much to lose.’

The overcrowded dinghy, around 30ft long, was so flimsy it was likened to a children’s paddling pool, and appears to have simply crumpled after either taking on water or colliding with a ship.

The Mail told yesterday how migrant Mohammed Aziz, 31, made a frantic phone call to his friend Peshraw Aziz and said: ‘It’s not good, the engine isn’t powerful enough – I don’t know if we’re going to make it.’

Multiple sources in the camp have claimed the boat could have had as many as 50 people on board, and the French authorities are braced for the death toll – currently at 27 – to rise.

Friend of Shakar and Harem Sanger Ahmed also told of his fears for two other Iraqi Kurds – Hassan, in his late twenties, and Twana Muhammad (pictured), 18, a student

6 months ago

The family of 27-year-old Deniz Ahmed Mohammed (left) said he left them a final voicemail saying ‘just pray for us’, while Riaz Mohammed, 12, (right) is also feared to be among dead

Speaking of his friends, Sanger said he has known Harem, thought to be 23, and Shakar, a 27-year-old geology graduate, all his life and they were all neighbours in Ranya, in the Kurdistan region of Iraq.Sanger said he travelled with Harem and Shakar to Turkey.

His friends made their way to France via Italy while he decided to come via Belarus, and the trio arranged to meet up in France.

Sanger also told of his fears for two other Iraqi Kurds – Hassan, in his late twenties, and Twana Muhammad, 18, a student.

He also believes an Iranian called Sirwan, aged around 25, and a man called Hever, in his 20s and from Ranya, may have died.

The youngest victim is feared to be Riaz Mohammed, 12, who was pictured wearing a life jacket.

Sanger added: ‘I’m not sure if I will get a boat now – if there’s a chance on a lorry I might not take that risk.’

Migrants in the camp told the Mail police controls are so lax that traffickers brazenly launch their human cargo in broad daylight in full view of security officers.

Karl Maquinghen, a French skipper who has been at sea for 21 years, sounded the alarm on Wednesday afternoon when he found bodies floating in the water.

‘Seeing so many dead people right next to us, it was like a horror film,’ he said yesterday. 

‘You can’t sleep – as soon as you close your eyes, you see bodies again.

‘We were petrified to even pull up the nets for fear there was one inside.If we had arrived five minutes earlier, we might have been able to save them.’

A relative of Deniz said his family in Ranya feared the worst.

‘He was suffering poverty then spent everything he collected to go to the UK, and this is what happened,’ nephew Darya said. 

‘My grandfather hasn’t even eaten until now.It is like a funeral for them.’

A final voicemail from Deniz said: ‘Now we are on the water, Inshalla [God willing] we will arrive safely. Just pray for us.’ 

Five people have been arrested in France over the 27 deaths, including one man held overnight driving a German-registered vehicle packed with inflatable ribs, although there is ‘no provable link’ with the sinking, according to prosecutors, despite French Interior Minister Gerald Darmanin insisting all were ‘directly linked’ to the drownings.

Police search Wimereux beaches near Bolougne from this morning days after 27 migrants died heading to the UK as Storm Arwen threatens to take more lives if more people try to cross

A man holds a sign that translates as ‘Save our migrant brothers and sisters’ at a memorial for people who have died while crossing the English Channel

A migrant prays at a makeshift migrant camp in Loon Beach – the day after 27 migrants died crossing the Channel –  in Dunkerque near Calais

On the same day as the tragedy, a total of 757 migrants crossed the Channel in 17 boats, while French authorities also prevented 176 people from reaching the UK in eight incidents, according to the Home Office.

A further 62 migrants successfully made the dangerous journey in two boats on Thursday and French authorities stopped 30 people from making the crossing in two incidents.

The latest confirmed figures mean 6,869 migrants have arrived in 201 boats so far in November and 26,591 have made the treacherous trip in 2021 – compared to 8,410 in 2020 and just 1,850 in 2019.

It comes as Storm Arwen began to tear through the Channel today raising fears more migrants will die if they try to cross from France to Britain as MPs demanded Emmanuel Macron swamps beaches with police to prevent any boats setting off in the high winds.

<div class=”art-ins mol-factbox news floatRHS” data-version=”2″ id=”mol-eceedca0-4f14-11ec-a087-231f47ee9729″ website victim of Channel tragedy confirmed as a bride-to-be from Iraq

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