Kicking off in calais again
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Kicking off in calais again
RIOTS IN CALAIS: Hundreds fight pitched battle with police in Jungle in bid to get to UK
VIOLENCE broke out in the so-called Jungle refugee camp in Calais as hundreds of UK-bound migrants fought a pitched battle with police.
http://www.express.co.uk/news/world/713161/immigrants-battle-police-Calais-Jungle-UK
And
http://news.sky.com/story/tear-gas-fired-as-hundreds-of-migrants-clash-with-calais-police-10587568
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Re: Kicking off in calais again
And Belgian police are arrested by French police near border for driving a load of illegal immigrants over to France...
https://www.thelocal.fr/20160922/belgian-police-return-migrants-to-france-and-are-arrested
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Re: Kicking off in calais again
Rumours abound of aid workers shagging the prostitutes out there. FFS!
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Re: Kicking off in calais again
The whole thing needs closing down... return the Africans to the African union to deal with and the middle eastern to the Arab league to deal with and the rest to Pakistan/bangladesh/India to deal with.
Tommy Monk- Forum Detective ????♀️
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Re: Kicking off in calais again
Tommy Monk wrote:
RIOTS IN CALAIS: Hundreds fight pitched battle with police in Jungle in bid to get to UK
VIOLENCE broke out in the so-called Jungle refugee camp in Calais as hundreds of UK-bound migrants fought a pitched battle with police.
http://www.express.co.uk/news/world/713161/immigrants-battle-police-Calais-Jungle-UK
And
http://news.sky.com/story/tear-gas-fired-as-hundreds-of-migrants-clash-with-calais-police-10587568
And ... these are the people the handwringers want over here???
They're violent, attacking lorries and drivers, people in cars, the police, the French who live in Calais, raping girls, they are just horrible. We don't want them in our country.
They should close this jungle place and deport them back to Africa. I don't believe any are refugees, they're all young Africans.
magica- Forum Detective ????♀️
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Re: Kicking off in calais again
Bang on!
Tommy Monk- Forum Detective ????♀️
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Re: Kicking off in calais again
HoratioTarr wrote:Rumours abound of aid workers shagging the prostitutes out there. FFS!
I read that it was women going out there and shagging the refugees.
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Re: Kicking off in calais again
Well now we are coming out of Europe, we will be able to have control over our borders.
I feel sorry for people who want to come here legally and have problems, but come illegally and they stay. What happened to having to claim asylum in the first country they enter.
Also when they come over on boats, why cant they be picked up and taken straight back.
I feel sorry for people who want to come here legally and have problems, but come illegally and they stay. What happened to having to claim asylum in the first country they enter.
Also when they come over on boats, why cant they be picked up and taken straight back.
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Re: Kicking off in calais again
Raggamuffin wrote:HoratioTarr wrote:Rumours abound of aid workers shagging the prostitutes out there. FFS!
I read that it was women going out there and shagging the refugees.
Who in their right mind would do that?
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Re: Kicking off in calais again
HoratioTarr wrote:Raggamuffin wrote:HoratioTarr wrote:Rumours abound of aid workers shagging the prostitutes out there. FFS!
I read that it was women going out there and shagging the refugees.
Who in their right mind would do that?
Horny women who want to meet desperate horny men?
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Re: Kicking off in calais again
eddie wrote:HoratioTarr wrote:
Who in their right mind would do that?
Horny women who want to meet desperate horny men?
Who knows what diseases they've got. I think it's pretty disgusting.
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Re: Kicking off in calais again
HoratioTarr wrote:eddie wrote:HoratioTarr wrote:
Who in their right mind would do that?
Horny women who want to meet desperate horny men?
Who knows what diseases they've got. I think it's pretty disgusting.
Well it's hardkt a deep and fulfilling togetherness, is it? There will be some babies born out of a few of those encounters probably.
eddie- King of Beards. Keeper of the Whip. Top Chef. BEES!!!!!! Mushroom muncher. Spider aficionado!
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Re: Kicking off in calais again
eddie wrote:HoratioTarr wrote:
Who knows what diseases they've got. I think it's pretty disgusting.
Well it's hardkt a deep and fulfilling togetherness, is it? There will be some babies born out of a few of those encounters probably.
Even worse.
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Re: Kicking off in calais again
HoratioTarr wrote:Raggamuffin wrote:
I read that it was women going out there and shagging the refugees.
Who in their right mind would do that?
They're dirty whores!
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Re: Kicking off in calais again
magica wrote:HoratioTarr wrote:
Who in their right mind would do that?
They're dirty whores!
I wish you would say what you mean Mags.
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Re: Kicking off in calais again
Haha Syl, I got a bit carried away there didn't I?
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Re: Kicking off in calais again
magica wrote:Haha Syl, I got a bit carried away there didn't I?
Lol...it's good to say what you mean.
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Re: Kicking off in calais again
And more of the same now...
http://www.express.co.uk/news/world/716637/Calais-migrants-police-clash-refugees-closure-Jungle-camp
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Re: Kicking off in calais again
All of these people are criminal illegal immigrants who should be rounded up and deported immediately!
The eu is the problem with their open borders across the whole place...
Hungary has the right idea by fucking them off!!!
The eu is the problem with their open borders across the whole place...
Hungary has the right idea by fucking them off!!!
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Re: Kicking off in calais again
Child refugees at Calais plunged into despair by plan to close camp
Charities claim that self-harm and mental health problems have soared and attack Home Office’s failure to rehouse children
Incidents of self-harm and depression among children in the Calais refugee camp are increasing as the mental health of unaccompanied minors deteriorates in advance of the site’s demolition. Charities, volunteers and aid agencies say they were witnessing psychological collapse among many of the site’s child refugees after President François Hollande confirmed last week that the camp would be shut down.
One senior official from Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) warned that some child refugees had threatened to harm themselves if the camp was destroyed. Aid workers also said other unaccompanied minors, many of whom are eligible to claim asylum in the UK, had talked about killing themselves, such was their despair over the camp’s future.
Abdul Afzali, who works for the charity Refugee Youth Service and looks after unaccompanied minors inside the Calais camp, said: “Some are burning themselves with cigarettes, one arm, then the other. Others have told me that they want to jump in front of a lorry and give up. Unfortunately, most have developed serious depression.”
There are at least 1,000 unaccompanied minors currently in the camp, and the British and French authorities have yet to develop a strategy to rehouse the vast majority of them after the site is destroyed later this year.
The approach of the Home Office is under increasing scrutiny. Despite a commitment in May to take thousands of child refugees from across Europe, it has admitted that not a single unaccompanied minor has been accepted. A group of Tory MPs is understood to have written to the prime minister, Theresa May, to register their concern.
Under a separate agreement designed to reunite child refugees with families living in the UK, only around 20 have been resettled since May and in these cases, charities say they have paid all the costs involved. The Home Office says it is committed to resettling “vulnerable children”.
Within the Calais camp itself, Liz Clegg, who runs the site’s unofficial women and children’s centre, said that from her observations, as many as 80% of the site’s unaccompanied minors exhibited mental health issues that would be flagged up as serious in an institution where normal child protection safeguards existed.
“They would be flagged up as ‘at risk’ – some would be placed on suicide watch. There is self-harming, repetitive behaviour; many of them are stuck in a loop. We have nine-year-olds who are barely hanging on,” said Clegg.
Grégoire Bonhomme of MSF, which has created a safe space for child refugees within the camp, said he too had heard of children threatening to hurt themselves when the camp was demolished. “Some said they will harm themselves because they will be dismayed at this situation. It is creating a lot of tension.”
Mary Jones, who runs Jungle Books for the camp’s child refugees, revealed that she had repeatedly seen new arrivals gradually go from initial optimism to a depressed state; some youngsters lay in bed for days. Simmons said that on Thursday an Afghan boy was taken from the camp to hospital after spending 48 hours lying in bed, unable to move.
On Saturday the charity Unicef became the latest organisation to criticise the Home Office over its approach to unaccompanied child refugees, demanding that the UK accelerate the transfer of vulnerable youngsters from Calais. Lily Caprani, Unicef UK’s deputy executive director, said it was pushing for the children in the camp to be placed in appropriate accommodation before any demolition began and for them to have access to care and legal support to process their asylum and family reunion claims. “The children in Calais need to know they will be safe before the bulldozers arrive,” said Caprani.
Charities estimate there are more than 400 unaccompanied children inside the camp who are eligible to come to Britain, but say the Home Office has not sufficiently tried to identify the exact number. More than four months after the UK government announced that it would accept child refugees from across Europe, the charities point out, no official process appears to have even been put in place to facilitate their transfer.
Josie Naughton, co-founder of the charity Help Refugees, said: “Currently no plan is in place as to how they will be protected and taken care of once the camp is demolished. We ask that the British and French authorities immediately put plans in place.”
Also on Saturday, French police fired teargas and water cannon at migrants and protesters who had gathered outside the camp in defiance of a ban, local authorities said. About 200 migrants and 50 activists assembled under a bridge to protest against living conditions. There were clashes as the police pushed the migrants back to the camp, and activists are reported to have thrown stones at the security forces.
Another 150 protesters who left Paris on Saturday on four coaches were blocked by police at a toll road about 30 miles (48 km) short of the port.
Idrissa has been in the camp since February and is hoping to be reunited with his uncle in Birmingham. Since leaving Darfur last year, he has lost contact with his entire family and has no idea where they are, or even if they are alive: “I have tried calling, but I have no idea what has happened to them.” The teenager’s only ambition is to reach the UK. Waiting in the Calais camp has been a grim and depressing experience. “There is too much violence here. We feel afraid,” he says, gesturing to a group of unaccompanied youngsters nearby.
Yemani, 15, from Tsorona, Eritrea
Yemani has been in the Calais camp for three months and is hoping to be reunited with his aunt, who lives in London. He is travelling alone and says that life inside the camp scares him: “There is too much fighting, people hitting each other. Bigger people than me hit me.” The teenager also says that the French police terrify him, pointing to a used teargas canister lying in the dirt outside a tent where some of the unaccompanied minors gather.
“They hit us, and fire at us,” he says, rubbing his eyes to mimic the pain.
Fadl, 17, from western Sudan
Fadl arrived in the Calais camp four weeks ago, the end of a journey from close to the Darfur border via Libya, across the Mediterranean and through Italy. His aim is to reach London and find a job as a mechanic. He says that he is petrified of the camp, especially at night, and has sought the protection of Sudanese elders to keep him safe. “There are big problems here, people fighting, coming to the tents and scaring us,” he says. He thanks the charities for providing sustenance and says he is “extremely grateful” for their kindness.
Mubarek, 16, from Ethiopia
A member of the persecuted Oromo people, Mubarek, who arrived in Calais three months ago, says his family are counting on him making it to the UK. Like many unaccompanied minors, he felt unsafe in the camp. “It is dangerous. Also, the police come in and scare us. If they try and shut the camp, they will be very bad,” he said. Mubarek raises his his hands and waves them frantically, recalling the terrors of his journey from northern Ethiopia: “I try not to think about it,” he says.
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2016/oct/01/child-refugees-despair-calais-camp-close
Climate change could bring chaos to this country in years to come and your children could end up like this, and it would be other countries talking about your kids the way you talk about these. You have no morals, no soul, no nothing. You are empty vessels, bereft of anything that would make you human. The people we need to get rid of are revolting pieces of flotsam like you.
Charities claim that self-harm and mental health problems have soared and attack Home Office’s failure to rehouse children
Incidents of self-harm and depression among children in the Calais refugee camp are increasing as the mental health of unaccompanied minors deteriorates in advance of the site’s demolition. Charities, volunteers and aid agencies say they were witnessing psychological collapse among many of the site’s child refugees after President François Hollande confirmed last week that the camp would be shut down.
One senior official from Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) warned that some child refugees had threatened to harm themselves if the camp was destroyed. Aid workers also said other unaccompanied minors, many of whom are eligible to claim asylum in the UK, had talked about killing themselves, such was their despair over the camp’s future.
Abdul Afzali, who works for the charity Refugee Youth Service and looks after unaccompanied minors inside the Calais camp, said: “Some are burning themselves with cigarettes, one arm, then the other. Others have told me that they want to jump in front of a lorry and give up. Unfortunately, most have developed serious depression.”
There are at least 1,000 unaccompanied minors currently in the camp, and the British and French authorities have yet to develop a strategy to rehouse the vast majority of them after the site is destroyed later this year.
The approach of the Home Office is under increasing scrutiny. Despite a commitment in May to take thousands of child refugees from across Europe, it has admitted that not a single unaccompanied minor has been accepted. A group of Tory MPs is understood to have written to the prime minister, Theresa May, to register their concern.
Under a separate agreement designed to reunite child refugees with families living in the UK, only around 20 have been resettled since May and in these cases, charities say they have paid all the costs involved. The Home Office says it is committed to resettling “vulnerable children”.
Within the Calais camp itself, Liz Clegg, who runs the site’s unofficial women and children’s centre, said that from her observations, as many as 80% of the site’s unaccompanied minors exhibited mental health issues that would be flagged up as serious in an institution where normal child protection safeguards existed.
“They would be flagged up as ‘at risk’ – some would be placed on suicide watch. There is self-harming, repetitive behaviour; many of them are stuck in a loop. We have nine-year-olds who are barely hanging on,” said Clegg.
Grégoire Bonhomme of MSF, which has created a safe space for child refugees within the camp, said he too had heard of children threatening to hurt themselves when the camp was demolished. “Some said they will harm themselves because they will be dismayed at this situation. It is creating a lot of tension.”
Mary Jones, who runs Jungle Books for the camp’s child refugees, revealed that she had repeatedly seen new arrivals gradually go from initial optimism to a depressed state; some youngsters lay in bed for days. Simmons said that on Thursday an Afghan boy was taken from the camp to hospital after spending 48 hours lying in bed, unable to move.
On Saturday the charity Unicef became the latest organisation to criticise the Home Office over its approach to unaccompanied child refugees, demanding that the UK accelerate the transfer of vulnerable youngsters from Calais. Lily Caprani, Unicef UK’s deputy executive director, said it was pushing for the children in the camp to be placed in appropriate accommodation before any demolition began and for them to have access to care and legal support to process their asylum and family reunion claims. “The children in Calais need to know they will be safe before the bulldozers arrive,” said Caprani.
Charities estimate there are more than 400 unaccompanied children inside the camp who are eligible to come to Britain, but say the Home Office has not sufficiently tried to identify the exact number. More than four months after the UK government announced that it would accept child refugees from across Europe, the charities point out, no official process appears to have even been put in place to facilitate their transfer.
Josie Naughton, co-founder of the charity Help Refugees, said: “Currently no plan is in place as to how they will be protected and taken care of once the camp is demolished. We ask that the British and French authorities immediately put plans in place.”
Also on Saturday, French police fired teargas and water cannon at migrants and protesters who had gathered outside the camp in defiance of a ban, local authorities said. About 200 migrants and 50 activists assembled under a bridge to protest against living conditions. There were clashes as the police pushed the migrants back to the camp, and activists are reported to have thrown stones at the security forces.
Another 150 protesters who left Paris on Saturday on four coaches were blocked by police at a toll road about 30 miles (48 km) short of the port.
Teenage voices from Calais: ‘There is too much fighting’
Idrissa, 17, from Darfur, SudanIdrissa has been in the camp since February and is hoping to be reunited with his uncle in Birmingham. Since leaving Darfur last year, he has lost contact with his entire family and has no idea where they are, or even if they are alive: “I have tried calling, but I have no idea what has happened to them.” The teenager’s only ambition is to reach the UK. Waiting in the Calais camp has been a grim and depressing experience. “There is too much violence here. We feel afraid,” he says, gesturing to a group of unaccompanied youngsters nearby.
Yemani, 15, from Tsorona, Eritrea
Yemani has been in the Calais camp for three months and is hoping to be reunited with his aunt, who lives in London. He is travelling alone and says that life inside the camp scares him: “There is too much fighting, people hitting each other. Bigger people than me hit me.” The teenager also says that the French police terrify him, pointing to a used teargas canister lying in the dirt outside a tent where some of the unaccompanied minors gather.
“They hit us, and fire at us,” he says, rubbing his eyes to mimic the pain.
Fadl, 17, from western Sudan
Fadl arrived in the Calais camp four weeks ago, the end of a journey from close to the Darfur border via Libya, across the Mediterranean and through Italy. His aim is to reach London and find a job as a mechanic. He says that he is petrified of the camp, especially at night, and has sought the protection of Sudanese elders to keep him safe. “There are big problems here, people fighting, coming to the tents and scaring us,” he says. He thanks the charities for providing sustenance and says he is “extremely grateful” for their kindness.
Mubarek, 16, from Ethiopia
A member of the persecuted Oromo people, Mubarek, who arrived in Calais three months ago, says his family are counting on him making it to the UK. Like many unaccompanied minors, he felt unsafe in the camp. “It is dangerous. Also, the police come in and scare us. If they try and shut the camp, they will be very bad,” he said. Mubarek raises his his hands and waves them frantically, recalling the terrors of his journey from northern Ethiopia: “I try not to think about it,” he says.
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2016/oct/01/child-refugees-despair-calais-camp-close
Climate change could bring chaos to this country in years to come and your children could end up like this, and it would be other countries talking about your kids the way you talk about these. You have no morals, no soul, no nothing. You are empty vessels, bereft of anything that would make you human. The people we need to get rid of are revolting pieces of flotsam like you.
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Re: Kicking off in calais again
Africa is a vast continent with 54 individual countries... they should be sent back to the African union to deal with.
Tommy Monk- Forum Detective ????♀️
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Re: Kicking off in calais again
This thread is about calais... start a thread about it Zack...
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Re: Kicking off in calais again
http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2016-08-05/30000-refugees-go-missing-swedes-face-increasing-violence-asylum-seekers
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/europe/germany/12174803/Germany-admits-130000-asylum-seekers-lost-raising-fears-over-crime-and-terrorism.html
https://www.rt.com/news/358348-switzerland-migrants-missing-influx/
And you must read this...
http://www.express.co.uk/news/uk/697136/missing-asylum-seekers-britain
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