War of words over plight of stranded ‘Jungle’ youths
DOZENS of migrant youths stranded for two days in the Calais “Jungle” as it was being demolished were offered transfers out of the camp yesterday as France and Britain battled over who was to blame for their plight.
The migrants, many of them minors, slept in some of the shelters left standing in a part of the slum that was razed in March, a prelude to this week’s massive clearance of the camp.
The Care4Calais charity said 107 people bedded down in makeshift schools, churches and mosques. Aid workers urged them to take buses leaving for shelters in another part of France yesterday.
Fifty minors took up the offer. Others were still hoping to be transferred to Britain.
The fate of minors left behind in the blackened mess of the sprawling camp emptied of thousands of migrants this week, some of whom set fire to their shelters on leaving, has sparked a war of words between France and Britain.
France sees the Jungle — one of the most visible symbols of Europe’s migrant crisis — as a problem of Britain’s making given that most of the migrants living there hoped to sneak across the Channel into England.
On Thursday evening, French Interior Minister Bernard Cazeneuve reacted indignantly to a demand by his British counterpart Amber Rudd that children left in the Jungle are “properly protected.”
Cazeneuve expressed “surprise” at Rudd’s call.
“These people ... had been planning to migrate to the United Kingdom,” he said in a statement, insisting that France “had fulfilled its responsibilities out of solidarity and without trying to shy away” from its duty.
Nearly 1,500 children have been moved to a container camp reserved for minors next to the Jungle. Britain has taken in 274 others since mid-October and is examining hundreds of applications.
On Thursday, a further eight buses left the ghostly shantytown, carrying 226 adults and 16 minors to shelters dotted around France.
A spokesman for the UN refugee agency UNHCR said the agency had asked that “special arrangements be made to ensure the safety and welfare of children in the Jungle before it closed.”
“We are continuing to work to identify and protect children and other individuals with special needs in Calais,” spokesman William Spindler said.
Regional security chief Fabienne Buccio declared the camp empty on Wednesday after nearly all the migrants had been bussed away and claimed those left behind were new arrivals lured by the prospect of being admitted to Britain.
“You can’t say the operation is over when there are people left,” said Anne-Louise Coury, the Doctors Without Borders coordinator in Calais. “The state still has a serious obligation towards migrants who are minors.”
More than a million people fleeing war and poverty in the Middle East, Asia and Africa poured into Europe last year, sowing divisions across the 28-nation bloc and fueling the rise of far-right movements, including Germany’s Pegida and France’s National Front.
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