The Borneo Post

Fires scorch ‘Jungle’ migrant camp as demolition resumes

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CALAIS, France: Fires cut through a swathe of the Calais ‘Jungle’ yesterday, sending migrants fleeing as French authoritie­s prepared to ramp up demolition of the notorious camp.

The blazes spread just hours after workers protected by police moved in Tuesday to clear the squalid camp that has been home to an estimated 6,000- 8,000 migrants, many with hopes of reaching Britain.

“Our tents were burning. Someone set fi re to them, though I don’t know who,” said Siddiq, a 16-year- old boy, who was forced by the flames to sleep under a bridge at the camp’s entrance.

“I have seen many fi res before but not like this.”

A Syrian man was taken to hospital with injuries to his ear drums after a gas canister exploded in the flames, which ravaged one of the main thoroughfa­res in the camp.

A local official downplayed the blazes, telling AFP: “It’s a tradition among communitie­s who set fire to their homes before leaving.”

On Tuesday workers in hard hats and orange overalls used power saws to reduce shacks to piles of wood and plastic that were removed by diggers.

Mattresses, blankets, clothes, pots and suitcases left behind by migrants were also carted away.

Located next to the port of Calais, the Jungle has for years been a launchpad for migrants attempting to make it to Britain by sneaking onto lorries or jumping onto trains heading across the Channel.

As part of the camp’s clearance, 3,242 adults have been transferre­d to centres around France since Monday and 772 unaccompan­ied minors have been moved to shipping containers converted into temporary shelters in the Jungle, the interior ministry said.

The numbers represent around half the camp’s estimated population before the operation began, according to official figures.

The authoritie­s have said those who agree to be moved can seek asylum in France. Those who refuse risk deportatio­n.

The Jungle’s thousand-plus unaccompan­ied minors have been the main focus of charities’ concerns, and hundreds of anxious youths queued Tuesday for interviews with French and British officials who will decide their fate.

Britain took in around 200 teenagers in the week before the clearance began as an eleventhho­ur gesture, with the transfers resuming Tuesday after a hiatus on Monday.

An AFP reporter saw a coach carrying around 30 child refugees arrive at an immigratio­n office in the London district of Croydon.

The curtains on the bus were drawn after pictures of some teenagers reunited with family in Britain sparked accusation­s that they had lied about being children.

French Interior Minister Bernard Cazeneuve said Tuesday that all unaccompan­ied minors ‘with proven family links in Britain’ would eventually be transferre­d and that London had committed to reviewing all other cases where it was ‘in the child’s interest’ to settle across the Channel.

British Interior Minister Amber Rudd on Monday pledged to bring eligible children from France to Britain “as quickly and as safely as possible”, without specifying numbers.

Police in Calais have battled near-nightly attempts by migrants to reach Britain over the past year.

The town’s Mayor Natacha Bouchart said seeing people queue to leave the camp was ‘a great relief’.

But many locals fear more settlement­s will sprout up in the area once the Jungle is razed.

Around France, the resettleme­nt of asylum- seekers has met with a mix of hostility and solidarity. — AFP

 ??  ?? Firefighte­rs extinguish burning makeshift shelters and tents in the ‘Jungle’ on the third day of the evacuation of migrants and their transfer to reception centres in France, as part of the dismantlem­ent of the camp in Calais, France. — Reuters photo
Firefighte­rs extinguish burning makeshift shelters and tents in the ‘Jungle’ on the third day of the evacuation of migrants and their transfer to reception centres in France, as part of the dismantlem­ent of the camp in Calais, France. — Reuters photo

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