Apologies if I've missed it, but I haven't seen it posted on here. The guy who died wasn't actually 16, but 28. He also had claims of asylum rejected in France (read into that what you will).
It's all well and good getting up in arms about children dying crossing the channel, but it seems to me as if it gets swept over that they are usually not children, women, or in fact families. This is my biggest gripe. Having compassion doesn't mean you need to take your brain out and be ignorant.
It doesn't make his death any less tragic for this chap, but the fact this is now generally being overlooked is concerning. On the one side you have 'sink the boats' and on the other you have a video projected onto the white cliffs of Dover glorying illegal migration.
I've always maintained every genuine refugee should have a roof over their head and given opportunities, but this is getting more and more silly. How many actually are refugees? The line that it is 'only a handful' isn't really an argument either.