(1 of 9)
Fires burn in the makeshift migrant camp known as "the jungle" near
Calais, northern France, Tuesday, Oct. 25, 2016. Crews have started
dismantling the squalid migrant camp in France after the process to
clear the camp began in earnest on Monday.
Hundreds of French police have swooped into the camp near the city of Calais, where thousands fleeing war and poverty have lived in squalor as they waited for a chance to sneak across the English Channel into Britain. Police are moving migrants to reception centers around France where they can seek asylum.
Migrants have flocked to the Calais region for decades, but the camp has grown as Europe's migrant crisis expanded. As it evolved into a massive slum supported by aid groups, France finally decided to shut it down.
As the reality of the mass evacuation took hold, fearful migrants 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."
The main alley through the camp near the city of Calais burned overnight, leaving skeleton-like hulks on either side of the road. Firefighters delved into the camp's deepest recesses, trying to prevent a massive conflagration.
Gas canisters popped as they exploded in the heat. One aid group's truck burst into flames. Migrants stood and watched. Some laughed. Steve Barbet, a spokesman for the regional authorities, said one migrant was hospitalized. About 100 migrants were evacuated.
The camp once housed 6,300 migrants, according to authorities, but aid groups said the number was much higher.
AP Writer Sylvie Corbet in Paris contributed to the story
No comments:
Post a Comment