The Daily Telegraph

Official refugee camp in Paris ‘as France not doing enough’

- By Henry Samuel in Paris and Nick Squires in Rome

PARIS will open its first internatio­nally recognised refugee camp “in the coming weeks,” its mayor announced yesterday, as she accused France and Europe of failing to “face up to the migrant crisis”.

Anne Hidalgo, a Socialist, said that the camp, somewhere in the north of the capital, would serve as a day centre for migrants and refugees, but also offer more permanent accommodat­ion. It will be up and running within a month to six weeks.

“Today, Europe is not facing up to the humanitari­an crisis of these refugees. Nor is our own country,” Ms Hidalgo told reporters at a press conference.

“I hear people say, ‘won’t this act as a magnet?’ But I think of other countries, like Germany, where they have created conditions to welcome hundreds of thousands of migrants in dignified conditions.

“We must do the same by taking the full measure of this migrant flow that is flooding Europe,” she added. “Paris will not sit idly by while the Mediterran­ean becomes a graveyard for refugees.”

Her words came hours after the UN’s refugee agency said that more than 2,500 people have died trying to cross the Mediterran­ean so far this year, 880 in the past week alone.

In the year to date, nearly 47,000 migrants have reached Italy, mostly from countries such as Senegal, Nigeria and Gambia, and classed as economic migrants, as well as migrants from Eritrea and Somalia, who are more likely to be viewed as asylum seekers.

The Dalai Lama said yesterday that Europe had accepted “too many” refugees, and they should eventually return to help rebuild their home countries.

In Paris several makeshift camps have sprung up holding hundreds of people but they are frequently dismantled by the authoritie­s and the refugees offered temporary housing further afield.

Europol announced last night that 19 people had been arrested for the forgery of documents on a large scale and the smuggling of irregular migrants in separate operations in the Czech Republic and Greece.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom