Calais Jungle - Räumungstermin 24. Oktober bestätigt

Calais Migrant Solidarity

Aktivist*innen vor Ort bestätigen mittlerweile, dass die komplette Räumung des Jungle von Calais am kommenden Montag, den 24. Oktober, beginnen wird.

 

Auch der detaillierte geplante Ablauf des Beginns der Räumungsmassnahmen steht mittlerweile fest. Die Leute von Calais Migrant Solidarity haben dazu einen Text auf französisch/englisch veröffentlicht:

 

October 21, 2016 - Calais Migant Solidarity

 

Eviction starting soon


After the meeting on october 20th between the prefecture and the associations about CAO, we know how the prefecture will organise the eviction. The eviction will start monday, 24th of october ( with the first buses). Destruction will start on tuesday the 25th.

The creation of the sorting center on Rue des Garennes is confirmed. People will pass by the sorting center before being divided onto buses going to CAOs all around the country. All the people still in the area, refusing to go to CAOs, will be sent to detention centers. New detention centers have been created for the eviction, some others have been emptied to hold people arriving from Calais. Marck airport may also be used to send people to detention centers.

 

The sorting center will be open from 8 am to 8 pm. It is already kept under surveillance by the police. People will be separated into different queues indicated by pictograms : single men, families, minors and « vulnerable people ».

Everybody except the minors, will have to choose between two areas in France. Each area get its color and people will have to wear a wrist band with the color of the area where they are going. People will be sorted and taken in big tents with fifty people getting the same wrist band. The will have to tell their identity (sirname, firstname, date of birth).
As soon as a tent is full, a bus will take all 50 people in the tent to the CAO with two people from associations, a fireman and a person from the civil security. Salam and La vie active have accepted to go into the buses.


There will be 60 buses on monday, 40 on tuesday, 30 on wednesday.
People may be able to stay for up to one month in the CAO. They will then have to apply for asylum in France or run away.
OFII has promised that people fingerprinted in other countries won’t be deported, but we still don’t have any written guarentee of that. Dublin deportation is happening in CAOs now.

Isolated minors are going to be interrogated to confirm that they are under 18yo. France terre d’asile, ofpra, DGEF and the Home Office (UK) are going to conduct these interviews. Minors will then go to the CAP to « treat their situation ». Minors who want to stay in France will be taken to Minors CAOs. There is still no information about their locations or the date that they will open.

Assocations collaborate with the eviction. France Terre d’asile are involved in selecting/rejecting the minors. Salam and La Vie active will be on the CAO buses.

 

La PASS and La Vie Active will continue their activities during the eviction.

Camp access will be controlled. Only the associations who get an agreement with the prefecture will be allowed in. The journalist will acess to the sorting center but don’t know yet if they will be allowed to go to the jungle. The Associations have given a list of their members. Anybody who is not on the list may be arrested. Four English people have already received OQTF.
Arrests of people and OQTF for non-french people may happen more and more often next week. We thank warmly the teachers, asked by the government to translate during garde-à-vue, who have refused it.

Cops have used a lot of teargas over the last three nights. it seems that they were using a new kind of gas causing vomitting, nausea, and big headaches with persistent effects.

Home destruction is never “humanitarian”, sorting people never respect their “dignity”.
The choice between CAO and detention center is not a choice.

 

mainstream:

 

Fotostrecke Zeit

 

Reportage taz

 

Agenturbericht auf spiegel online

 

Verlagerung der Fluchtrouten nach Belgien? taz

 

Ausführlicher Artikel in Le Monde