French protesters blockade Calais roads, demanding closure of ‘Jungle’ migrant camp
Truckers, farmers, dock workers and merchants angry at the disruption caused by thousands of migrants in their midst in the northern French city of Calais blocked the main access route to Britain to press authorities to set the date to raze an overcrowded makeshift camp.
The action on Monday appeared to pay off and, despite tensions among protesters, blockades were being lifted 12 hours later after the region’s top state official reassured the activists that the huge, makeshift camp would be dismantled and funds made available for struggling businesses.
The state says some 7,000 migrants are living in the camp, known as “the jungle,” while aid groups have put the number at more than 9,000. All are living in a drastically downsized camp after half was razed in March.
For the protesters, the migrants — from Africa, the Middle East and beyond — are an economic drain on Calais and a stain on its image.
“We are truckers, not migrant traffickers. Let’s liberate Calais together,” read a sign on the front of some big rigs.
Interior Minister Bernard Cazeneuve announced Friday that the government would dismantle the camp “in a controlled operation” as soon as possible, but did not say when. He also promised financial compensation for businesses losing money due to migrants, but gave no details.
Representatives of farmers, truckers and merchants came away from a meeting with the state representative of the region, Fabienne Buccio, with a new commitment — but no date — that the camp would be completely dismantled “in a single step.”
Buccio also said a special fund to help businesses in need would be activated and more than 230 extra members of security forces brought in, bringing the total to more than 2,000.
Christian Salome, head of the aid group Auberge des Migrants, which has long worked with migrants arriving in Calais, said camp dwellers were also victims.
“Refugees are the first victims of the blockading of the border,” he said, a reference to a 2003 French-British accord that effectively puts the British border in Calais, where they are stopped from entering Britain, and puts the onus of the migrant plight on France.
Salome noted that 11 migrants have died this year — seven on the highways — “and the goal of the refugees is exactly the same as the goal of the truckers: put an end to this situation.”
Hundreds of big rigs, tractors and dockers and merchants on foot blocked the main highway to the Eurotunnel and port.
“We are fed up with the migrant situation in Calais. They are increasingly aggressive,” said French trucker Blaise Paccou. “We leave in the morning. We don’t know how we’re going to return in the evening because of the rocks and metal bars being thrown at us.”
Calais Mayor Natacha Bouchart, holding an “I love Calais” T-shirt as she walked with merchants, criticized the Socialist government for failing to provide a global plan to end the crisis.
Aid groups warn that a hasty shutdown of the camp would scatter the migrants, aggravate the city’s troubles and worsen the humanitarian drama. While the camp conditions are dismal, migrants have access to food distribution and showers.
Cazeneuve refused again Monday to provide a date for closing the camp because of “the need for a method.”
“We need to provide shelters,” he said.
The Calais region has drawn migrants for some two decades, with refugees from the war in Kosovo streaming in in the late 1990s, followed by Afghans fleeing war. A huge Red Cross camp in nearby Sangatte was leveled in 2002 and the migrants pushed into Calais.
“We should not be misunderstood. We have nothing against migrants,” said Frederic Van Gansbeke, who helped organize the protest. Anger, he said, was directed at the government.