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Police swoop on Paris migrant camp after Calais Jungle clearout

by Reuters
Monday, 31 October 2016 21:00 GMT

City workers remove tents and mattresses from an evacuated makeshift migrant camp near the metro stations of Jaures and Stalingrad in Paris, France, September 16, 2016. REUTERS/Benoit Tessier

Image Caption and Rights Information

A digger moved in to clear a small part of the camp

* Some 2,500 migrants now sleeping rough in Paris camp

* Paris mayor requesting the camp be shut - letter

* French president urges Britain to take in Calais minors (Adds French president's comments)

By Johnny Cotton and Emmanuel Jarry

PARIS, Oct 31 (Reuters) - French riot police swooped on a makeshift migrant camp in northeast Paris on Monday, sparking a brief standoff at a site where numbers have soared since the closure of the Jungle shanty town in the northern port city of Calais.

The operation, largely consisting of identity checks on some of an estimated 2,500 migrants sleeping rough around a canal and railway bridge near Paris's Stalingrad metro station, came as pressure mounts on the government to shut the camp.

Tension has risen with the speculation that police will move in to evacuate and close the camp definitively in the coming days, as the Paris authorities are demanding.

A Reuters journalist at the scene said a digger moved in to clear a small part of the camp, a sprawl of tents, mattresses, blankets and the meagre belongings of migrants who come mostly from war-torn countries such as Afghanistan.

Migrants shouted at police as the digger swept debris and rubbish away. The camp was otherwise left largely intact. One policeman sprayed a migrant with teargas.

After a couple of hours, police allowed migrants to move back after a tidy-up by municipal cleaning workers.

In a letter sent to Interior Minister Bernard Cazeneuve, a copy of which was seen by Reuters, Paris Mayor Anne Hidalgo requested that the camp be shut rapidly on humanitarian and sanitary grounds.

City Hall officials say the numbers sleeping rough in the area have swollen by about a third since the evacuation last week of the Jungle camp in Calais, where more than 6,000 people were living, most of them in the hope of making it across the short Channel sea crossing to Britain.

NO RETURN

The Calais camp, where demolition teams finished tearing down unoccupied shacks and tents on Monday, came to symbolise Europe's fraught efforts to cope with a record influx of migrants fleeing strife in countries from Afghanistan to Sudan.

President Francois Hollande, in an interview with northern France daily La Voix de Nord, promised the citizens of Calais the migrants would not return.

"I assure them there will be no reoccupation of the area. It has been evacuated, it will be secured. Nobody will return," he said.

Hollande reiterated his call for Britain to shoulder its responsibility for some of the 1,500 minors housed temporarily in converted shipping containers in Calais since the clearout. Britain is obliged under EU rules to take in minors with verified family ties.

Hollande said they would be taken to dedicated centres where British officials would examine their request to go to Britain.

He said those minors who do not leave for Britain will be taken care of by the French state, adding that in a few days there would be no more foreign minors in Calais.

An Interior Ministry official said talks were continuing with Britain.

The rest of the 6,000-plus inhabitants of the Jungle have been sent to lodgings across France, pending examination of their asylum cases.

Cazeneuve says around 85 percent of all migrants evacuated from Calais will likely secure refugee status. (Additional reporting by Chine Labbe and Geert De Clercq in Paris and Pierre Savary in Calais; Writing by Brian Love; Editing by Alison Williams)

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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