Cape Times

French police close migrant camp in Paris

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PARIS: French police removed around 500 migrants – mostly Afghans and Africans – from a makeshift camp in central Paris yesterday.

In the operation, buses transporte­d the migrants to lodgings around Paris where they can pursue asylum requests.

Some of the migrants were hopeful the move will help them get certainty about their future.

James Okafor, who said he fled his country Nigeria after being attacked, said he “will be very happy to leave the camp” because it will help him meet officials who will decide if he can stay in France.

Others, like an Afghan who gave his name only as Desajan, were apprehensi­ve. “All people in here don’t know other languages – French, English – they don’t know what to do,” he said.

A smaller camp at Porte de Poissonnie­re was also cleared out yesterday.

Deputy Paris Mayor For Emergency Housing Ian Brossat said “the large majority” from the Paris camps “will see their asylum rights recognised in one of the European countries”.

Brossat said that an incident last month in which two migrants drowned nearby, and the proliferat­ion of bloody fights between rival camp dwellers, have increased pressure on the French Interior Ministry to close the camps and provide lodging for the migrants.

Police have already cleared out some 28 000 migrants from Paris camps in the past three years, but the arrivals haven’t slowed.

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