The brutal murder of 12-year-old Lyhanna in northern France has ignited fury on both sides of the Channel, forcing the Home Office to urgently review cross-border child safety protocols. Lyhanna’s body was found last week in a disused warehouse near Calais, a grim reminder of the vulnerability of children caught in the migration crisis. French prosecutors say the prime suspect is an Afghan migrant known to authorities, but questions are already mounting over how he slipped through the net.
In Westminster, Home Office sources confirmed that officials are re-examining the “Dover Clause” – the part of the UK-France border agreement that covers unaccompanied minors. The review will look at information sharing, risk assessments and the use of Europol databases. “We cannot allow another Lyhanna,” one official told me. “But we also cannot let this become a political football.”
The tragedy comes as the government faces renewed pressure over its Rwanda policy and the small boats crisis. Labour MP Yvette Cooper called for a “root and branch” review of joint policing operations. “These children are not just numbers on a spreadsheet,” she said. “They are human beings, and we owe them a duty of care.”
Across the Channel, the French government has declared a national day of mourning. In Lyhanna’s hometown of Lens, hundreds gathered for a silent vigil. Her mother, Nathalie, told reporters: “I want answers. I want to know why my little girl was left alone in a foreign country.”
But critics say the UK cannot wash its hands of responsibility. The National Crime Agency has acknowledged that child trafficking between France and Britain is on the rise, with gangs exploiting the chaos in the camps. “We are talking about children who have been passed from hand to hand, often without proper documentation,” said a frontline aid worker. “They fall through the cracks because the system is designed to deter, not protect.”
The Home Office insists that safeguarding remains paramount, but admits that “operational constraints” mean not every case can be tracked. “We have to balance compassion with control,” a spokesperson said. For now, that balance has cost Lyhanna her life.
As the review gets under way, the question is: will it deliver real change, or just more paperwork? The families of the most vulnerable children are watching, and they are running out of patience.








