The National - News

Flames speed the end of Jungle refugee camp

Migrants start a fire as they leave, accelerati­ng plans to close the camp after large parts went up in smoke

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CALAIS // The French refugee camp known as the Jungle was empty yesterday after fires started by departing refugees accelerate­d plans to remove residents.

“There are no more migrants in the camp,” official Fabienne Buccio said at the camp near Calais. “Our mission has been fulfilled.” Residents of the camp were still milling around the site after the announceme­nt, but authoritie­s said they would stop processing people by yesterday evening local time.

Refugees have flocked to the Calais region for decades, but the Jungle grew as Europe’s migrant crisis expanded.

As the makeshift camp evolved into a massive slum supported by aid groups, France finally decided to shut it down.

Police began moving residents to reception centres around France – where they can seek asylum – on Monday and demolition of the camp began a day later. Evacuation was acelerated yesterday after large portions of the camp went up in flames. Some of the departing refugees set shelters and tents alight before police moved in to relocate them. Huge clouds of black smoke billowed over the sprawling camp, where between 6,000 and 8,000 people were living before the evacuation­s began.

The heat from the fires, which began in the early hours, caused gas canisters to explode.

A Syrian man was taken to hospital after suffering injuries to his ear drums after one such explosion.

“You have to leave,” an aid worker said to residents.

“You have these gas canisters in your caravan, get them out.”

A volunteer’s SUV could be seen leaving the camp with more than 10 gas cylinders on a trailer.

Meanwhile, one aid group’s lorry burst into flames.

Firefighte­rs delved into the camp’s deepest recesses, trying to prevent a conflagrat­ion from taking place. But they did not manage to prevent the flames from ravaging the camp’s central thoroughfa­re, leaving skeleton-like hulks on either side of the road. “Our tents were burning. Someone set fire to them, though I don’t know who,” said Siddiq, a 16-year-old boy, who was forced to sleep under a bridge at the camp’s entrance.

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

Another minor, a 17-year-old Afghan named Arman Khan, said he had lost everything he owned to the flames. “Someone burnt our tents. Maybe they used petrol or something, I don’t know, but the fires spread fast. We had to run out in the middle of the night,” he said.

“I left all my things behind, I have nothing now.”

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

Meanwhile, as the reality of the mass evacuation took hold, fearful refugees from Afghanista­n, Sudan, Eritrea, Syria and Pakistan braced for a new reality. Some pledged to just keep moving.

“This jungle is no good,” said Muhammad Afridi, 20, from Pakistan. “We go to a new jungle.”

 ?? Etienne Laurent / EPA ?? The operation to dismantle the Jungle migrant camp in the French port city of Calais took three days. French authoritie­s said there were about 6,000 migrants living in the camp at the start of the week but aid organisati­ons said the figure was higher.
Etienne Laurent / EPA The operation to dismantle the Jungle migrant camp in the French port city of Calais took three days. French authoritie­s said there were about 6,000 migrants living in the camp at the start of the week but aid organisati­ons said the figure was higher.

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