The Independent

UN says Calais camps blot on face of Europe

- ANDY MCSMITH

Conditions in the migrant camps in Calais are ‘a living reproach to European society’

Conditions in the migrant camps in Calais are “a living reproach to European society” and to the UK’s refusal to take its fair share of refugees, the UN Special Representa­tive on Internatio­nal Migration has said.

Peter Sutherland castigated the government­s of the UK, France and several Central and East European states for their seeming failure to understand the desperate plight of refugees fleeing war zones.

A visit to the camps in Calais had left him wondering if the squalor he saw there was a deliberate ploy to discourage others from trying to find refuge in the UK.

Speaking at a conference on boat migrants at University College Dublin, Mr Sutherland said yesterday: “The conditions in which the migrants were living were truly shocking. Doctors there told me of clear evidence of TB and scabies.

“This is a disgrace. It is also a clear example of the broader inadequaci­es in Europe’s practical expression of its much-vaunted values.

“These poor people, determined to reach Britain, and having already endured dreadful hardships to get to Calais, are stuck. The site is a living reproach to European society – a desperate place populated by desperate people.”

Mr Sutherland added: “The numbers in the camp are only about 3,000 and could be easily handled. Are they being kept in squalor to put off others? Is improving theircondi­tion seen as a potential ‘pull factor’?

“This logic is almost as obscene as the suggestion that saving lives in the Mediterran­ean might tempt others to come. The reality is that the issues surroundin­g the mobility of mankind in an era of global communicat­ions of all kinds require far more than the pandering to the xenophobia and racism increasing­ly evident in parts of the developed world.”

The Mid Kent MP Helen Whately, one of three MPs who travelled to Calais to take aid donations to inhabitant­s, said conditions there were “bad and getting worse”.

David Cameron has promised that the UK will take 20,000 Syrian refugees over the next five years, but will only take those who are in camps in the Middle East.

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 ??  ?? Peter Sutherland says Britain could easily take in the small number of people in the camps
Peter Sutherland says Britain could easily take in the small number of people in the camps

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