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Since the closure of the camp at Sangatte a few years ago there has been a growing problem of people with nowhere to go sleeping rough in and around Calais. They have often travelled from across Asia and Africa, and whilst they could try to claim asylum in France or one of the other European countries they have come through, chose to try and do so in the UK. In their journey many
will have placed their trust and
whatever money they have in the hands of
people traffickers. When they arrive in
Calais many will live in conditions of
squalor controlled my mafia style crime
gangs, and be encouraged to do whatever
it takes to get to England. I was staggered to learn at that time that the Calais authorities had little if no contact from the UK Home Office and Immigration service. It would appear that the perception is that Britain’s borders are weak and that once in the UK the chances of deportation are so small that it is worth taking the risk of trying to get in. Earlier this year the
Government announced that it would spend
£15million on new X-ray equipment for
use by the French authorities to detect
people trying to smuggle themselves into
the UK. This effectively means that we
are using our money to try and encourage
the French authorities to enforce their
own laws. But I think there is another issue here and one that we see in too many other areas of public life, and that is the culture of managing failure. This develops into a culture where as long as no one feels that a problem is directly their fault, it isn’t their responsibility either. We have been living with this problem on the UK-Calais border for years with no permanent resolution. The clearing of the ‘Calais Jungle’ is merely dispersing the problem. It offers no long term solution and our Government seems to have no real ambition to find one, so you can be sure that the problem will return. |
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