Migrants sew mouths to protest ‘Jungle’ demolition

Calais / AFP

A group of Iranian migrants sewed their mouths shut in a disturbing protest at the ongoing demolition of the “Jungle” migrant camp in
the French port city of Calais on
Thursday.
AFP journalists said at least nine Iranians had stitched their mouths shut in the southern half of the camp, which is being gradually demolished by French authorities.
One carried a sign, saying “Will you listen now?” It follows a similar protest by Iranian refugees the night before. In a statement, Calais town hall said the unsettling protest had aroused “deep emotion”.
“But at the same time, nothing justifies such extremes when the state has done everything to take the migrants out of these undignified conditions,” it said.
France has offered the evicted migrants places in heated containers next to the Jungle, or in one of 100 accommodation centres around the country.
But many are reluctant to give up their dream of smuggling themselves across the Channel to England, where they have family or community ties, or see greater hope of finding work and education.
French authorities began demolishing the southern half of the camp on Monday, and by Thursday they were still razing makeshift shelters under heavy police protection, drawing ever closer to one of the main food distribution centres, which serves around 1,000 meals
a day.
“I hope I can still come here,” said Wadou, an Eritrean. “I don’t have anything to cook with in my shelter.”

Leave a Reply

Send this to a friend