- National Front leader Marine Le Pen makes call for internal border controls
- Claims it is 'time to wage war on this phenomenon' unfolding in Calais
- Le Pen seized on sharp escalation of tensions in the French port town
- Comes after police used teargas to stop immigrants jumping on UK-bound lorries this week
- She described Calais as 'a jungle' where the 'survival of the fittest reign'
Published:
08:51 GMT, 25 October 2014
|
Updated:
14:49 GMT, 25 October 2014
Illegal
immigrants making desperate bids to reach Britain have turned the port
of Calais into a lawless 'jungle', according to the French far-right
leader.
Marine
Le Pen seized on escalating tensions in the town by calling for the
urgent reintroduction of internal border controls that have been
banished across much of Europe.
The
leader of the anti-immigrant National Front party made the remarks
during a visit to the northern port town where riot police this week
used teargas to ward off hundreds of immigrants seeking to jump on to
lorries bound for Britain.
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Marine Le Pen has called for the urgent reintroduction of internal border controls that have been banished across much of Europe
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French police used tear gas on crowds
of migrants this week in Calais when around 300 attempted to storm
lorries heading for the Channel
Le Pen
denounced what she described as the 'phenomenal scandal' of a town left
to its own devices in the face of a rise in the number of illegal
immigrants seeking to get across the Channel
'It's
time to wage war on this phenomenon,' Le Pen, whose party won about 14
percent of the vote in Calais town hall elections last March.
Roughly
2,300 immigrants, many of them from Africa, are roaming the streets and
sleeping in makeshift camps in and around Calais while waiting to
attempt the final leg of their bid to reach Britain, according to
estimates from the local prefect's office.
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Illegal immigrants making desperate
bids to reach Britain have turned the port of Calais (pictured) into a
lawless 'jungle', according to the French far-right leader
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Her comments come days after riot
police used teargas to ward off hundreds of immigrants seeking to jump
on to lorries bound for Britain
The number was 1,500 just a few months ago.
Police,
who had to deploy tear gas to contain hordes of immigrants on several
occasions this week, kept dozens of supporters and opponents of Le Pen
apart as the National Front leader arrived in the town, with some minor
scuffles reported.
'The
rule of law no longer holds sway in Calais. Now it's no more than a
jungle where violence and the survival of the fittest reign,' said Le
Pen.
The
port has long been a magnet for illegal migrants trying to reach
Britain, where they believe they are more likely to find work.
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French riot policemen force out
migrants who were hidden in a lorry making its way to the ferry terminal
in Calais earlier this week
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A policeman climbs into a lorry to remove a migrant who has been trapped in-between the cargo and the lorry in Calais
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Nat Snet Kfley, 17, has living in the rubbish-strewn migrant camp in Calais for three months
Britain is not one of the 26 European states who have abolished internal borders under the Schengen agreement.
In
September, the French and British governments announced that the Calais
port layout would be changed to make it easier to carry out controls
and improve traffic flow, with barriers put up along the bypass leading
to the port area.
French
Interior Minister Bernard Cazeneuve has also promised a day-centre will
be opened to cater to the hundreds of illegal immigrants who roam the
streets and live in squats or makeshift camps.
Denis
Robin, prefect in the Pas-de-Calais region, said the centre should be
open in November but that the authorities were determined to ensure it
would not become a massive residential camp of the kind that was run by
the Red Cross - the Sangatte camp - before ex-President Nicolas Sarkozy
ordered it shut in 2002 at Britain's request.
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