French President François Hollande has
vowed
"definitively, entirely and rapidly" to dismantle "The Jungle," a
squalid migrant camp in the northern port town of Calais, by the end of
this year.
Hollande made the announcement during a September 26 visit to Calais —
but not to the camp itself — amid growing unease over France's
escalating migrant crisis, which has become a central issue in the
country's presidential campaign.
The French government plans to relocate the migrants at the camp to
so-called reception centers in other parts of the country. But it
remains unclear how the government will prevent migrants from returning
to Calais.
Sceptics say the plan to demolish "The Jungle" is a publicity stunt
that will temporarily displace the migrants but will not resolve the
underlying problem — that French officials refuse either to deport
illegal migrants or else to secure the country's borders to prevent
illegal migrants from entering France in the first place.
The decision to demolish the camp came just days after construction work
began
on a wall in Calais, a major transport hub on the edge of the English
Channel, to prevent migrants at the camp from stowing away on cars,
trucks, ferries and trains bound for Britain.
In recent months, people
-smugglers armed with knives, bats and
tire irons have forced truck drivers to stop so that migrants can board
their vehicles. The Deputy Mayor of Calais, Philippe Mignonet, has
described the main route to the port as a "no-go area" between midnight and 6am.
"The Jungle" — the name "jungle"
comes
from "dzhangal," the Pashto word for forest — now houses around 10,000
migrants from Africa, Asia and the Middle East who are trying to reach
Britain. Migrants at the camp are from Sudan (45%), Afghanistan (30%),
Pakistan (7%), Eritrea (6%) and Syria (1%),
according
to aid agencies. The migrants at the camp are mostly young men and
boys, including some 800 unaccompanied minors, who are seeking jobs in
Britain's underground economy.
Migrants have been gathering in Calais in large numbers ever since the Channel Tunnel linking France and Britain
opened
in May 1994, and the Schengen Agreement, which abolished border
controls between France and most of its neighbors (but not the UK),
entered into force in March 1995.
In 1999, the French government asked the Red Cross to build a migrant
"reception center" in Sangatte to accommodate a growing number of
migrants on the streets of Calais and surrounding areas. The Sangatte
camp, which was housed in a giant warehouse situated about a half mile
from the entrance to the Channel Tunnel, had a capacity of 600 people.
Far from resolving the migrant problem in Calais, the Sangatte
facility served as a magnet, quickly drawing thousands more people to
the area. Within months, some 2,000 migrants were living in the camp in
increasingly cramped conditions. Many of those staying at Sangatte tried
to jump onto slow-moving trains at the entrance to the Channel Tunnel,
or hide inside trucks crossing to Britain on ferries.
At the time, French authorities
reported
a massive increase in the number of arrests in or around the Channel
Tunnel. In 1999, 8,000 people were arrested in Calais for immigration
offenses. By 2001, that number had jumped ten-fold to 80,000 arrests.
Eurotunnel, the company that manages and operates the Channel Tunnel,
said
that in 2001 alone, 54,000 people had "attacked" the terminal in Calais
and 5,000 had gotten through. Many of those were living in Sangatte.
The Sangatte camp was closed in late 2002, after a series of riots
between Afghan and Kurdish migrants. In all, some 67,000 migrants
stayed at the facility during its three years in operation.
In February 2003, France and Britain
signed
the Treaty of Le Touquet, which allows for so-called juxtaposed
controls, meaning that travelers between the two countries now clear
immigration in the country of departure rather than upon arrival. In
effect, the treaty pushed parts of the British border to France. By
doing so, it exacerbated the migration bottleneck in Calais.
As part of the agreement to close Sangatte, Britain
took
in 1,200 migrants. Those who remained in France sheltered in at least a
dozen different squats both inside and on the outskirts of Calais.
These camps — Africa House, Fort Galloo, Leader Price/Sudanese Jungle or
Tioxide Jungle — have been repeatedly raided or bulldozed by French
police, only for other squats to crop up elsewhere.
Many of the migrants housed at Sangatte moved a few kilometers east
to a disused industrial zone called The Dunes. Situated just steps from
the Port of Calais, the area would become known as "The Jungle." Over
the years, French authorities have repeatedly tried to demolish all or
parts of the camp, only for it to reemerge time and time again, and
always with more migrants.
On September 22, 2009, French police
bulldozed
"The Jungle" and rounded up hundreds of migrants hoping to stow away on
trucks headed for Britain. A day later, Calais Mayor Natacha Bouchart
said she had "spotted between fifteen and twenty new squats" nearby. She also reported that Afghan migrants were
establishing
makeshift camps at the Hoverport, a disused collection of buildings
which closed in 2005 after the last hovercraft sailed from Dover to
Calais.
September 12, 2014. Police in Calais
warned
that migrants were becoming increasingly violent in their quest to
reach Britain. Gilles Debove, the Calais area delegate for the French
police union, said tear gas was being used to stop "mass onslaughts" on
vehicles about to cross the Channel:
"The other day, two to three hundred migrants tried to
get into a lorry park and we fired tear gas to scatter them because
there are too few of us to control situations like this any other way.
We're also facing an increase in crimes by migrants who mug people,
steal mobile phones and carry out sexual assaults."
September 10, 2015. French media
reported
that police were searching for an Islamic State jihadi who was hiding
in "The Jungle" in the hope of reaching Britain to launch an attack
there.
November 11, 2015. More than 250 French riot police were
deployed
to "The Jungle" after weeks of unrest. Local government official
Fabienne Buccio said the rise in violence was due to the migrants'
frustration at being prevented from reaching Britain.
January 19, 2016. French authorities
leveled
one-third of "The Jungle" to create a 100-meter "buffer zone" between
the camp and an adjacent highway that leads to the ferry port.
February 7, 2016. The migrant crisis
spread
to other parts of France due to an increased police presence in Calais.
Migrant camps sprouted up in the nearby ports of Dunkirk, Le Havre,
Dieppe and Belgium's Zeebrugge, as migrants seek new ways to cross the
English Channel to Britain.
February 29, 2016. After a court in Lille
approved a plan by the French government to evict 1,000 migrants from "The Jungle," demolition teams began
dismantling
the southern part of the camp. The government tried to relocate the
migrants to official accommodation inside converted shipping containers
in the northern part of the camp. But most refused the offer, fearing
they would be forced to claim asylum in France. "Going to Britain is
what people here want," Afghan migrant Hayat Sirat
said. "So destroying part of the jungle is not the solution."
March 7, 2016. Migrants evicted from "The Jungle"
moved
to a new camp in Grande-Synthe near the northern port of Dunkirk, just
up the coast from Calais. Critics said the new camp risks becoming a
"new Sangatte," referring to the Red Cross center in Calais that was
closed in 2002.
May 31, 2016. Migrants evicted from Calais
moved
to Paris and established a massive squatter camp at the Jardins d'Eole,
a public park near the Gare du Nord station, from where high-speed
Eurostar trains travel to and arrive from London. The area, which is so
dangerous that the government has
classified it as a
no-go zone (
Zone de sécurité prioritaires, ZSP),
has become a magnet for human traffickers who charge migrants thousands
of euros for fake travel documents, for passage to London.
August 11, 2016. In an interview with
Le Figaro, a French counter-terrorism officer
warned
that Islamic State jihadis were hiding in "The Jungle." He said: "What
is happening in The Jungle is truly mind boggling. Our officers are
rarely able to penetrate the heart of the camp. It is impossible to know
if a jihadi from Belgium, for example, is hiding in the camp. This camp
is a blind spot for national security."
September 5, 2016. Hundreds of French truck drivers, businessmen and farmers
blocked
off the main route in and out of Calais, in an attempt to pressure the
French government to close The Jungle. The blockage brought to a
standstill the route used by trucks from all over Europe to reach Calais
and Britain.
September 12. A document leaked to
Le Figaro revealed
the government's plan, dated September 1, to relocate 12,000 migrants
from Calais to other parts of France. The migrants would be relocated to
around 60 so-called Reception and Orientation Centers (
centres d'accueil et d'orientation, CAO), each with a capacity of between 100 and 300 migrants.
September 13, 2016. The President of the Alpes-Maritimes region, Eric Ciotti,
criticized
the government's "irresponsible" plan to relocate migrants in Calais to
other parts of France. He said the plan would "proliferate a multitude
of small Calais, genuine areas of lawlessness that exacerbate lasting
tensions throughout the country." He added:
"This plan reflects the resignation of the government in
the face of massive illegal immigration. It weakens national cohesion
under a false pretext of humanity which hides a dangerous ideology that
denies any distinction between foreigners who seek asylum, who France
should decently receive, and those who are economic migrants, whom we
can no longer tolerate, and who should be returned to their countries of
origin.
"The only solution is to deport, without delay, all illegal
immigrants who do not intend to remain on our territory, and to place
asylum seekers in centers dedicated to the study of their cases."
September 14, 2016. The President of the Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes region, Laurent Wauquiez,
expressed
anger at the government's "diktat" to relocate 1,800 migrants from
Calais to his region. He said: "This is madness and it is not a matter
of solidarity. The problem of Calais is not solved by multiplying Calais
throughout France. We expect the government to solve the problem of
Calais, not move it to other parts of the country."
September 16, 2016. Steeve Briois, the Mayor of Hénin-Beaumont and Vice President of the National Front
criticized the government's plan to relocate migrants from "The Jungle" to the rest of the country. He said:
"This crazy policy would consequently multiply
mini-Calais on the entire national territory, without consulting the
people and local elected officials. This forced policy of the Socialist
government is simply unacceptable; it seriously threatens public order
and the safety of our citizens."
September 20, 2016. Construction work
began
on a wall to prevent migrants at the camp from stowing away on cars,
trucks, ferries and trains bound for Britain. Dubbed "The Great Wall of
Calais," the concrete barrier — one kilometer (half a mile) long and
four meters (13 feet) high on both sides of the two-lane highway
approaching the harbor — will pass within a few hundred meters of "The
Jungle."
September 21, 2016. A whistleblower
reported
that volunteer aid workers at "The Jungle" were forging sexual
relationships with migrants, including children. "I have heard of
volunteers having sex with multiple partners in one day, only to carry
on in the same vein the following day," he wrote. "And I know also, that
I'm only hearing a small part of a wider scale of abuse." He added that
the majority of cases in question involved female volunteers and male
migrants. "Female volunteers having sex enforces the view (that many
have) that volunteers are here for sex," he wrote.
September 28. Calais Mayor Natacha Bouchart expressed skepticism
about President Hollande's pledge to close "The Jungle." In an interview
with Europe 1, she
said:
"This dismantling will be very complicated. I am skeptical about the
commitment of François Hollande that there will be no migrant camp in
the territory of Calais. I do not know how he will do it."
https://www.gatestoneinstitute.org/9044/france-migrants-jungle