Aid groups say dismantling French refugee camp won’t work
PARIS — Charities working with refugees and migrants living in a slum-like camp in northern France objected Tuesday to the government’s plan to dismantle the site and disperse the occupants, saying French authorities should not act in haste.
Although no date has been announced for closing the refugee camp in Calais known as “The Jungle,” the French government has announced it will happen by the end of the year. The first group of migrants is expected to be moved as soon as next week.
Homelessness charity Emmaus and other organizations working in the camp met again with Interior Minister Bernard Cazeneuve Tuesday. Emmaus asked for the closure to be postponed, saying the conditions for an effective and humanitarian relocation have not been met.
“The government is heading straight into a wall,” Emmaus France President Thierry Kuhn said ahead of the meeting. “We should not bury our heads in the sand; people will come back as long as we won’t be able to offer them a solution adapted to their life plan.”


