French law may stop global walker swimming channel

Resul Rehimov/Anadolu via Getty Images A man wearing a wetsuit and an earpiece stands in front of the sea on a beach.Resul Rehimov/Anadolu via Getty Images
Karl Bushby faces having to swim across the English Channel after his request to access the Channel Tunnel was refused

A Briton striving to complete his 28-year global trek may be stopped from swimming across the English Channel by French legislation.

Karl Bushby, 57, set off from Chile in 1998 and has reached Belgium. Under the terms of his challenge, he is unable to use transport to reach his home city of Hull.

In June, Bushby was told by Eurotunnel bosses that his request to walk along a service tunnel had been declined due to safety and operational reasons, leaving him with no alternative than to swim.

The former paratrooper aims to attempt the swim in October, but French officials have told the BBC the country "tolerates Channel crossing by swimming only from the UK coast to the French coast".

Karl Bushby A man in his 20s, wearing a red coat kneels next to a cart containing his provisions. He is holding a globe.Karl Bushby
Bushby set off on his 36,000-mile (58,000km) adventure in November 1998

Bushby said: "We are talking with the French coastguard."

Referencing a 2018 "prefectoral order", the French Maritime Rescue Coordination Centre confirmed the stipulation.

It said it had referred Bushby's support team to the Channel and North Sea Maritime Prefecture, which manages the order, for them to consider.

The BBC has contacted the body for a comment.

While Bushby said he still hoped Eurotunnel bosses would have a change of heart, he is beginning to draw up plans for the Channel swim.

"We have secured a support boat for October," said Bushby. "That's a big thing. I would expect it to take two or three days to swim across to the UK."

Bushby is currently in Mexico, where he retreats between stages of his challenge in order to meet visa regulations, rest and plan routes.

"I will be back in Belgium in early September," he said. "Towards the end of that month, I expect to be in France, preparing for the swim.

"I am not angry it has come to this. I am more disappointed. But things could still change. Walking through the service tunnel is still the preferred option."

Bushby made clear the swim depends on French authorities and the weather.

"We are talking with the French coastguard and we hope an exception [to the rule] can be made," he said.

"The weather is also a big factor. For a successful attempt, you need a window of good weather."

Bushby has tackled other large expanses of water on his adventure.

In 2006, he became the first Briton to walk across the Bering Strait, the treacherous 58-mile frozen sea between North America and Russia. That feat required some swimming.

And in 2024, he completed a 186-mile (300km) swim across the Caspian Sea in order to avoid Russia or Iran amid rising global tension.

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