A private jet full of super-rich holidaymakers from London has been sent back to the UK after the group landed in France and tried to get to their Cannes villa by helicopter during the Coronavirus lockdown.

Seven men in their 40s and 50s and three women in their 20s arrived at Marseille-Provence airport last Saturday and were immediately intercepted by local police.

The organiser of the trip – a Croatian national working in banking and estate agency in the UK – had booked the jet and helicopters to take everybody to the rented villa.

The private jet used by the groups was an Embraer Legacy 600 – a Brazil made luxury business jet, which costs around £5million.

When confronted by police, the Croatian businessman offered them cash, saying: ‘I have money, let’s talk,’ said the police source.

Pictured: A 2014 file photo of the Embraer Legacy 600 jet, similar to the one flown from Farnborough Airport to Marseille last saturday

Pictured: Flight tracker shows the route taken by the wealthy businessmen and the 'escorts' from Farnborough Airport near London to Marseille last Saturday

An undated photograph shows the cityscape view of the French Riviera with yachts in Cannes. The group of super-wealthy holidaymakers had three helicopters booked to whisk them away to the city

The source said the Croatian had ‘paid for everything,’ including the villa and plane, was ‘looking forward to the break, with his friends and young female escorts.’

The source added: ‘He said they all go to the villa, and lockdown there, and that there would be no problem.

‘But it was obviously a recreational trip, and under the containment measures these are strictly prohibited.’

The only fines issued were to the three French helicopter pilots. The holiday party did not technically enter France, as they were kept on the plane while being interviewed by police.

None of those on board have yet been identified by police.

A police source told the BFM news outlet: ‘They had planned to come and have a good time on the Riviera despite the Coronavirus epidemic.

‘Everything had been planned by the organiser of the trip – a Croatian national who works in finance and real estate – starting with the London-Marseille trip in a private jet that he had rented on the other side of the Channel.

‘He then booked a luxury villa in Cannes. To get there, the man had reserved three helicopters from a company in the Var which provides private connections for privileged customers.’

Commercial flights are greatly reduced at airports across Europe at the moment, and the authorities are trying to stop private jets breaking restrictions.

The source reported that police guarding the ‘borders of Marseille-Provence airport asked the private jet not to come and land on its tarmac.’

This handout picture released on March 18, 2020 by the French Army shows a soldier standing on the tarmac at Marseille Airport. The source reported that police guarding the ‘borders of Marseille-Provence airport asked the private jet not to come and land on its tarmac’

But the plane still landed anyway, and the passengers, aged between between 24 and 27 years for the women, and 40 and 50 for the men, were not allowed to get off the aircraft.

‘Controlled by the border police and the gendarmerie of air transport, none had valid reasons for traveling,’ said the source.

‘Crossing borders is only allowed with a legitimate or compelling reason,’ he added.

As well as Croatian, the ten travellers were German, French, Romanian and Ukrainian, said the source.

They initially argued with police, and expressed anger when three helicopters waiting for them were ordered to leave empty, and their pilots fined for breaking lockdown restrictions.

Police check the self-certified not of a passerby justifying their outing in Strasbourg, eastern France, yesterday on day 24 of lockdown in France aimed at curbing the spread of the COVID-19 pandemic, caused by the novel coronavirus. France has been in lockdown since March 17 in a bid to slow the spread of the pandemic, with only essential trips allowed that must be justified with a signed piece of paper

Nine members of the holiday party returned to London by the private jet on Saturday evening, while the tenth went back to Germany.

France's coronavirus death toll rose to 12,210 on Thursday, and there are now 7,062 people in intensive care units at hospitals across the country.

France has been in lockdown since March 17 in a bid to slow the spread of the pandemic, with only essential trips allowed that must be justified with a signed piece of paper.

Health director Jérôme Salomon said the lockdown was working: ‘Thanks to these measures, we are in the process of putting the brakes on the epidemic.’

The lockdown, which was supposed to run until April 15, will be extended beyond that date, it was announced on Wednesday.

President Emmanuel Macron will discuss the coronavirus situation in a live TV address to the nation on Monday.