World

Calais 'Jungle': France urges UK to take more children

15:11 pm on 30 October 2016

France's president Francois Hollande has urged Britain to take its share of responsibility for migrant children who remain in Calais after the "Jungle" camp was cleared.

Smoke rises from a fire over the "Jungle" migrant camp in Calais during the massive operation to clear the settlement. Photo: AFP

Mr Hollande said 1500 unaccompanied minors, who were still in the port city, would be taken to accommodation centres very shortly.

The UK has so far agreed to take in about 250 of the children from there.

Migrants fleeing war and poverty had used the sprawling Jungle site as a staging post to try and reach the UK.

A government spokesperson said the UK remained "firmly committed to working with the French to safeguard and protect children who remain in Calais - and that includes transferring eligible children to the UK safely and as soon as possible".

The Jungle had been seen as a key symbol of Europe's failure to deal with the worst migrant crisis since World War II.

At least 1500 minors have been staying at a special container camp at the site, but it has been full and many children have also reportedly been sleeping rough.

Mr Hollande said he and UK Prime Minister Theresa May had discussed British officials processing them in France with a view to rehousing them in the UK.

"I talked yesterday [Friday] with the British prime minister, as [French Interior Minister] Bernard Cazeneuve did with his British counterpart, so that the British can go to those centres with those minors and take their share to welcome them in Britain," he said.

Refugees camp along avenue de Flandre, Place de la Bataille-de-Stalingrad in Paris. Photo: AFP

Mr Hollande was speaking during a visit to an accommodation centre for migrants in Doue-la-Fontaine, in western France.

He hailed the evacuation of the Calais Jungle as a success.

"There were no incidents from start to finish," Mr Hollande said.

"We had to rise to the challenge of the refugee issue. We could not tolerate the camp and we will not tolerate any others."

He said the encampments springing up in Paris would be forced to close.

Many of the 5000 people evacuated from the Jungle have been taken to reception centres around France, where they are being processed and will be able to apply for asylum.

But aid workers believed that hundreds, or perhaps even thousands of migrants, might have fled the area before the clearance operation began last Monday.

Demolition work is continuing and the local authorities say the clearance will be completed by Monday.

-BBC