The Welland Tribune

France clearing jungle

Authoritie­s begin busing migrants to reception centres around country

- ELAINE GANLEY

CALAIS, France — Carrying their belongings in bags and suitcases, long lines of migrants waited calmly in chilly temperatur­es Monday to board buses in the French port city of Calais, as authoritie­s began evacuating the squalid camp they call home.

French authoritie­s were beginning a complex operation to shut down the makeshift camp known as “the jungle,” uprooting thousands who made treacherou­s journeys to escape wars, dictators or grinding poverty and dreamed of building new lives in Britain.

Closely watched by more than 1,200 police, the first of hundreds of buses began transferri­ng migrants to reception centres around France where they can apply for asylum. The camp will then be levelled. Hotels and even castles are among the hundreds of buildings officials have been converting to migrant housing.

“This is an operation we want to be peaceful and under control. So far it is,” French Interior Minister Bernard Cazeneuve said in Paris.

Authoritie­s say the camp holds nearly 6,500 migrants who are seeking to get to Britain. Aid groups say there are more than 8,300.

The ramshackle camp in the sand dunes of northern France is home to migrants from Afghanista­n, Sudan, Eritrea, Syria and elsewhere. After often harrowing journeys across land and treacherou­s seas, paying smugglers along the way, most reach a dead end in Calais, unable to find a way across the English Channel.

The harsh reality of the move hit migrants on Monday. Some were happy to leave, others were confused or in shock.

Throngs of migrants lined up at the registrati­on centre where they were separated by category, such as families, unaccompan­ied minors or adults.

A group of Sudanese got tired of waiting and returned to their spot in the camp, bags slung over their shoulders and laughing. They said they’d try again on Tuesday.

But basic informatio­n was lacking for many. “What should I do?” asked a 14-year-old newly arrived Afghan.

Mahmoud Abdrahman, 31, from Sudan, said he’d go Tuesday, too.

He pulled a black knapsack from his shelter to prove that he was ready.

“It’s not good, the jungle”, he said, complainin­g of inadequate food and water and filthy toilets shared by hundreds. Ultimately, Abdrahman wanted one thing more than anything else.

“I need peace,” he said, “anywhere.”

Afghan Imran Khan, 35, risks expulsion if he accepts the French plan to move him to a reception centre, because his fingerprin­ts were taken in another European country before he arrived in France. Under European rules, he must be sent back to the country where he first registered.

“I will decide tomorrow (what to do),” he said.

Khan lives in a muddy tent, one of hundreds that are expected to be destroyed by the end of the week as their occupants depart.

Unaccompan­ied minors, many with family members in Britain, were to be housed on-site in containers set up earlier this year as their files are studied in London to see if they qualify for a transfer across the English Channel.

The humanitari­an organizati­on France Terre d’Asile says 1,291 unaccompan­ied minors live in the camp.

Fourteen migrants have died this year in the Calais area.

Officials have said that there will be a solution for each migrant — though expulsion may be among them for those who don’t qualify for asylum.

Meanwhile, France will spend about $36 a day on each migrant in the reception centres, according to officials. It was not immediatel­y clear how long they will be allowed to stay.

 ?? THIBAULT CAMUS/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Riot police push back migrants as they line up to register at a processing centre in the makeshift migrant camp near Calais, northern France. French authoritie­s are beginning a complex operation to shut down the camp.
THIBAULT CAMUS/ASSOCIATED PRESS Riot police push back migrants as they line up to register at a processing centre in the makeshift migrant camp near Calais, northern France. French authoritie­s are beginning a complex operation to shut down the camp.

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