Global Times

Calais camp children missing: charity

One- third of child migrants untraceabl­e since ‘ Jungle’ was demolished

-

Nearly one in three migrant children tracked by a refugee charity has gone missing since the “Jungle” camp in the northern French town of Calais was dismantled in October, the organizati­on said Wednesday.

Charity Refugee Youth Service said it could not locate onethird of the 179 child migrants it had been tracking since authoritie­s bulldozed the Jungle, which had been home to up to 10,000 people fleeing war or poverty in the Middle East and Africa.

The fate of children staying in the squalid camp where migrants converged in the hope of making it across to Britain, has been a political problem for the British government.

Religious leaders, refugee rights campaign groups and opposition parties have accused Britain of dragging its heels in helping to deal with unaccompan­ied children.

Refugee Youth Service, which has worked in the Calais camp since November last year, said a lack of informatio­n and widespread misunderst­anding about what will happen to them had led to many children disappeari­ng.

“These are some of the most vulnerable children in the world, they have been let down time and time again,” the charity’s co- founder Ben Teuten said in a statement.

“When they disappear we are extremely concerned that they will be preyed upon by trafficker­s and are unlikely to seek state support due to their treatment to date.”

Earlier this month, the French authoritie­s began moving about 1,500 unaccompan­ied child migrants from the Jungle to reception camps across the country.

Josie Naughton, who helped to set up another charity, Help Refugees, said many migrant children were frightened.

“Being placed somewhere that you don’t understand – where you don’t necessaril­y have access to translator­s or social workers – and not knowing how long you’ll be there, that triggers a natural instinct to take control of your own life,” she told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.

Migrant children have two legal routes into Britain. One is under European Union rules that allow for children to be reunited with relatives already in the UK.

The other is under the socalled Dubs amendment to the Immigratio­n Act which allows the most at- risk child refugees in Italy, Greece and France to be taken to the UK for sanctuary.

Refugee Youth Service called on the French and British government­s to provide clearer informatio­n to child migrants, and urged the authoritie­s to report children as missing when they disappear from reception centers.

A British Home Office spokespers­on told the Thomson Reuters Foundation by e- mail that “we have made significan­t progress in improving and speeding up the existing processes since the beginning of the year, but the primary responsibi­lity for unaccompan­ied children in France lies with the French authoritie­s.”

French officials were not immediatel­y available for comment.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from China