Evening Telegraph (First Edition)

Migrants flee as fire ravages camp

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The fire at the camp outside Dunkirk destroyed wooden shelters and came hours after a clash involving up to 150 migrants, according to officials.

Riot police moved into the camp to break up the trouble that one migrant said pitted Afghans against Kurds.

Five people were injured in the fight among 100 to 150 migrants, leaving three of them in hospital with knife wounds, officials said.

They linked the fight with the fire that broke out hours later but stressed that an investigat­ion is needed to determine its cause.

No injuries were immediatel­y reported because of the blaze.

Firefighte­rs worked to contain the flames leaping into the night sky and devouring the shelters of migrants who were evacuated to local gymnasiums.

“I lost all my documents,” said an Iraqi migrant who identified himself only as Albidani, standing outside the camp.

“I have only this paper that says I’m a refugee in France.”

He said Kurds and Afghans had clashed before the fire erupted but he did not know why.

“We are refugees here in France. We don’t have any place ... we don’t know what to do. We lost everything,” Albidani said.

It is estimated that up to 1,500 migrants were living in the over-populated camp.

The camp in the Dunkirk suburb of

HUNDREDS of migrants have been evacuated after a huge blaze ravaged their camp in northern France.

Grande-Synthe was set up a year ago by Doctors Without Borders.

The neat rows of wooden shelters replaced a nearby squalid makeshift tent camp which was rife with trafficker­s preying on migrants.

Humanitari­an groups said the original camp was filthier and more dangerous than a huge makeshift camp in Calais, about 19 miles to the west, that was dismantled by the state in October.

The population of the new Dunkirk camp swelled after the one in Calais was torn down.

Clashes, as well as small fires, have occurred in the past in the La Liniere camp. French officials decided last month that the camp population must be reduced to 700 and security increased to keep out trafficker­s.

The authoritie­s said the camp should be dismantled bit by bit with migrants being housed in special centres.

 ??  ?? A migrant from Iraq, right, who lived in the camp ravaged by fire, speaks to journalist­s near the scene.
A migrant from Iraq, right, who lived in the camp ravaged by fire, speaks to journalist­s near the scene.
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