Kuwait Times

Crime down but misery persists one year since Calais evacuation

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For Fabien Sudry, a senior state official in the port of Calais, the evacuation of the squalid “Jungle” migrant camp 12 months ago has changed the lives of security forces and locals. The number of nightly break-ins into trucks heading for Britain has been divided by three, while intrusions at the tunnel linking France and Britain have stopped. Mass outbreaks of fighting which required police interventi­ons have also ceased. “The pressure from migration has fallen sharply,” Sudry, who as the local “prefet” is in charge of law and order, told AFP. “There are around 500 migrants today compared with 8,000 a year ago.”

The mass clearance of the Jungle in October last year saw French authoritie­s order its occupants -most of them young men from Syria, Sudan, Afghanista­n or Iraq - to accommodat­ion around France. Then the bulldozers were sent in. The move was decried as heavy-handed by some critics and activists, while pictures of the destructio­n were published around the world as a vivid illustrati­on of Europe’s struggle to cope with the unpreceden­ted surge of arrivals. “I continue to think that dismantlin­g the Jungle was a success and a model for cooperatio­n between the state and associatio­ns,” said aid worker Stephane Duval, who works for the Vie Active local associatio­n, which partnered with the state.

Controvers­y

The “Jungle” was the latest of a series of camps which had sprung up on the northern coast of France as a temporary home for migrants who, rather than apply for asylum in France, dreamt of reaching Britain. But after 18 months, and faced with the growing disruption at the port, an unhappy local population in Calais and criticism from the United Nations and rights groups, the then-Socialist government decide to act. “The evacuation went very well, they (the migrants) were impatient to be accepted in France somewhere else other than here,” said the head of local charity l’Auberge des Migrants, Christian Salome. Sending them to temporary accommodat­ion and asylum centers around the country proved controvers­ial, however, with local mayors in some towns and villages saying they had not been consulted.

A far-right major in southern France put up posters featuring the words “The state is imposing them... migrants are coming” over a picture of a crowd of dark-skinned men in front of the town’s cathedral. Of the 7,400 people who left the Jungle, 42 percent have had their asylum request accepted since, 7.0 percent were rejected, while 46 percent are still waiting for a response, official figures show.

Bleak conditions

The number of arrivals in Europe has fallen sharply over the last 12 months after the biggest refugee crisis since the Second World War. In 2016, a deal between the European Union and Turkey all but closed down the most popular eastern route for refugees and migrants heading towards the richest northern countries of the bloc. And a crossing point between Libya and Italy has also been restricted over recent months, with EU President Donald Tusk saying Friday that there was a “real chance” to close this central route.

In Calais, local associatio­ns put the number of migrants sleeping rough around the town at around 600-700 and they have sounded the alarm about “catastroph­ic” conditions. Interior Minister Gerard Collomb, who took office in the new centrist government in May, has been resolute that no camp should be allowed to spring up again, leading police to be criticized for harassing migrants and restrictin­g the work of local charities. A few portable toilets and water taps were installed reluctantl­y on a road near the port, but only after the government was forced by a court order to provide basic sanitation facilities. Local associatio­ns recall a promise to build a permanent center to house refugees in Calais made by former interior minister Bernard Cazeneuve at the time the Jungle was destroyed.

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