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POST TIME: 26 October, 2016 00:00 00 AM
Calais ‘Jungle’ empties as demolition crew move in
AFP

Calais ‘Jungle’ empties as demolition crew move in

Migrants gather around a bonfire to warm up in the “Jungle” migrant camp in Calais, northern France, on Monday at sunset during the full evacuation of the Calais “Jungle” camp, in Calais, northern France.French authorities began moving thousands of people out of the notorious Calais Jungle on Monday before demolishing the camp that has served as a launchpad for attempts to sneak into Britain. AFP photo

Workers were set to begin demolishing the notorious Calais “Jungle” camp yesterday as a second batch of migrants boarded buses under a massive operation to clear the squalid settlement, reports AFP.
More than 1,900 left the slum on Monday, ahead of work to tear down the makeshift shelters and eateries in the camp that has become a symbol of Europe’s refugee crisis.
Some 400 youngsters are being provisionally housed in shipping containers in a part of the Jungle where families had been living, Interior Minister Bernard Cazeneuve said Monday.
An estimated 6,000-8,000 people, mainly Afghans, Sudanese and Eritreans, have been living in dire conditions in one of Europe’s largest shantytowns in the hope of sneaking into Britain. Early Tuesday, scores of minors awaited their turn to be interviewed by French and British officials.
Among them was Alaa, a 17-year-old from Iraq’s second city Mosul, who said he fled his country with his 25-year-old brother when the Islamic State group launched its offensive into northern Iraq in 2014.
“We had no choice but to flee,” he said. “If they want to kill you they kill you.”
But life in the Jungle has been “really horrible,” he said. “I had my phone stolen, I was beaten, I was threatened.”
His brother managed to sneak into Britain and join an uncle there, but Alaa stayed back because “it was far too frightening and dangerous.”
Cazeneuve said all unaccompanied minors “with proven family links in Great Britain” would eventually be transferred across the Channel.
‘We’re doing their work’
Britain has taken in nearly 200 teenagers over the past week, but the transfers were on hold Monday.
British interior minister Amber Rudd said London was contributing up to £36 million (40 million euros, $44 million) towards the operation to clear the camp.
The head of France’s refugee agency, Pascal Brice, had harsh words for Britain’s role on Tuesday. “We’re doing their work for them,” he said on French radio, reiterating calls for Britain to take in the Jungle’s minors.
Britain and France signed the so-called Le Touquet accord, which effectively moved Britain’s border with France to the French side of the Channel, in 2003.
Christian Salome, head of the Auberge des Migrants (Migrants’ Hostel) charity, said the transfer process was “working well” but he feared around 2,000 people “still want to reach England.” The French interior ministry dismissed that figure as exaggerated.