Violent clashes broke out in the refugee camp outside Calais yesterday,
as French authorities began to demolish the southern part of the
so-called 'Jungle'.
Charities working in the camp have reported a heavy police presence
armed with rubber bullets. Help Refugees UK said teams were dismantling
shelters using crowbars, mallets and Stanley knives, and shared a video
showing tear gas being used against people trying to stop the
demolition.
"This is shocking and a long way away from the humanitarian
dismantling of the camp promised by the Minister of the Interior last
week," the charity said.
Another video posted to Facebook showed a water cannon being used by French police.
Reuters reports that tear gas was fired by police around midday and
between 150-200 activists and migrants threw stones. Three shelters were
reportedly set on fire, while one person has been arrested for trying
to stop workers from clearing the site.
A court in Lille ruled last Thursday that the Calais prefecture could
legally demolish a large part of the Jungle, and evict its inhabitants,
believed to include more than 3,400 refugees and migrants. It did,
however, stipulate that "common social areas" – understood to include a
church, several mosques and schools, a women and children's centre and a
library – would not be destroyed.
Interior Minister Bernard Cazeneuve said displaced persons would be
relocated to converted shipping containers in the northern part of the
Jungle, or to a number of other refugee centres around France.
Campaigners, however, say this is a poor alternative to the Jungle,
where inhabitants have set up shops, restaurants and cafés. There are
particular concerns for unaccompanied minors, more than 300 of whom live
in the southern part of the camp.
Charity CalAid said it was "appalled and saddened" by the demolitions carried out yesterday.
"French demolition teams are in the Southern section of the camp
ripping apart shelters and moving residents out of the camp," it said in
a post to its Facebook page.
"Rubber bullets and tear gas for the people, mallets and Stanley
knives for their homes. Volunteers being prevented from entering the
camp. Refugees hitting the road with nothing but a sleeping bag.
"French Minister of the Interior, Bernard Cazenove [sic], promised
'humanitarian' methods of relocating the residents of the camp – there
is nothing humanitarian in the actions of the authorities today."
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