French court rejects bid to halt demolition of Calais camp

French court rejects bid to halt demolition of Calais camp
Migrants and migrant-supporting association members look out from a watchtower at the "Jungle" migrant and refugee encampment in Calais on Monday before the dismantlement of the site. (AFP)
Updated 18 October 2016
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French court rejects bid to halt demolition of Calais camp

French court rejects bid to halt demolition of Calais camp

LILLE: A group of French charities failed Tuesday in a last-ditch legal bid to block the razing of the so-called “Jungle” migrant camp in the northern town of Calais.
A court in the nearby city of Lille rejected their appeal which claimed that dismantling the camp was “an attack on the fundamental rights” of the migrants there, mostly Iraqis, Afghans and Sudanese.
The court ruled that the evacuation was intended to stop the “inhumane and degrading” treatment of people in the squalid camp by moving them to reception centers around the country.
No date has yet been announced for the demolition of the camp, currently occupied by around 5,700 migrants, according to the government.
French President Francois Hollande has pledged to close it down by the end of the year, removing an embarrassment for the government that has also disrupted port operations and train travel around Calais.
Migrants and refugees routinely try to break into trucks heading to Britain, which they see as a more attractive destination than France for family or economic reasons.
The interior and housing ministers welcomed the court decision which they said reinforced their determination to dismantle the camp before winter sets in.