Daily Mail

Calais chaos could leave shelves empty

- By James Slack and Ray Massey

BRITAIN will soon face ‘empty supermarke­t shelves’ if militant French strikers continue inflicting chaos on Calais, UK port bosses warned last night.

The chief executive of the Port of Dover appealed for Government help as French union leaders threatened new stoppages this week.

Tim Waggott said the disruption caused by the last fortnight of strike action in Calais had cost the UK economy £1billion.

A group of migrants took advantage of the disruption to try to storm the Channel Tunnel terminal last week, causing further delays.

MPs yesterday heard the situation is so bad that UK-bound lorry drivers are afraid to check their lorries for fear of finding violent would-be illegal immigrants.

In an open letter, Mr Waggott said £100billion a year of trade comes through the Port of Dover.

He added: ‘How could you equate the importance of keeping such valuable trade moving with the incredible disruption caused at a major interna- tional gateway – Calais – by the mob rule of a small number of aggrieved militant Frenchmen?

‘Unless supermarke­ts with empty shelves and assembly lines with vital parts missing are to become acceptable, then clearly under no circumstan­ce should the recent situation be allowed to happen again.

‘This is not an immigratio­n issue ... This is a debate about our trading island nation maintainin­g the economic recovery.’

Firebrand French trade union boss Eric Vercoutre said he was ready to bring Calais ‘to a standstill’ again to try to save up to 600 jobs under threat from Eurotunnel’s disposal of its ferry arm MyFerryLin­k.

Boats which are bringing migrants across the Mediterran­ean to Europe are also carrying terrorist fighters from Islamic State, the European Union’s top prosecutor Michele Coninsx warned yesterday.

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