PARIS: French demolition teams cleared the last shacks in the Calais “Jungle” on Monday, signalling the end of the notorious camp as concerns mount for thousands of migrants sleeping in the streets in Paris.
Squads of workers using diggers, tractors and cranes had torn down the final tents and makeshift migrant homes on the windswept stretch of northern coastline.
Sand, mud and piles of rubbish now mark the spot where thousands of migrants and refugees passed through as they tried to sneak into Britain, making the “Jungle” camp a symbol of Europe’s migrant crisis.
Only a church and two small mosques have been spared destruction. They will be preserved only for as long as more than 1,000 unaccompanied teenagers are housed temporarily nearby in special shipping containers. The minors await news of their transfer to Britain or alternative housing in France, with their fate a source of enduring tension between London and Paris.
“They said there was going to be a bus today. When?” asked 18-year-old Mohammed from Sudan, as he rode a bike near where a street of shops had stood in the camp.
At its height, the camp was home to more than 10,000 people, with the squalid conditions, crime and disruption to Calais’s crucial port and train link to Britain a source of anger and embarrassment in France.
Six months before elections, Socialist President Francois Hollande is on a drive to take refigees off the streets and transfer them to shelters around the country where they can seek asylum. And he has promised that the “Jungle” will not be reborn in Calais. saying he understands that the city’s residents had endured a tense situation for a long time.
“I assure them that there will be no resettlement on the land… no one will be able to get back on it,” Hollande said in an interview to be published Tuesday in regional daily La Voix du Nord.
While the Calais camp is now demolished and thousands have been sent to lodgings elsewhere, the fate of the unaccompanied minors housed near the site remains unresolved.
France has called on Britain, the intended final destination for most Jungle migrants, to do more. Since mid-October, Britain has taken in over 270 children and has promised to take in hundreds more.







