Calais migrant crisis: PM offers extra fencing and dogs

  • Published
Media caption,

Police said there were "too many to count" through the fence on Thursday night, as Paul Adams reports

Extra sniffer dogs and fencing are to be offered to Calais officials to help them deal with high numbers of migrants trying to reach the UK, the PM says.

David Cameron spoke to French President Francois Hollande on the telephone on Friday and said the pair had agreed to work to tackle illegal immigration.

The PM has warned the situation will be a "difficult issue" throughout summer.

There have been thousands of attempts by migrants to access the Eurotunnel terminal, affecting train services.

The crisis has led to major congestion on both sides of the Channel, with passenger services disrupted and 6,000 lorries parked in queues along the M20 in Kent as part of Operation Stack.

Ministers said they were considering setting up temporary lorry parks to ease the pressure on roads, but the Road Haulage Association said the measures were not enough.

And there were further problems in Calais on Friday when former MyFerryLink workers protesting against job cuts blocked road access to the port area by burning tyres.

Image source, Getty Images
Image caption,

Ferry workers burned tyres on a road leading to the port of Calais

Extra French police

On Friday evening, Downing Street said the prime minister and Mr Hollande had "both expressed concern about the immediate security challenges and reiterated their commitment to continue working closely together to tackle the problems".

"Both leaders agreed on the need to work with Eurotunnel to monitor and secure the area and for respective ministers to continue discussions over the coming days to implement additional measures that could further improve the situation on the ground."

Speaking earlier after he chaired a meeting of the government's Cobra emergency committee, Mr Cameron said the provision of extra French police at the Eurotunnel site had already had "some effect" on disruption.

Media caption,

David Cameron: ''We need to do more to help lorry drivers and holiday makers''

Fencing supplied by the UK government earlier this month is being put up around the platforms where vehicles board the Eurotunnel shuttle and the work is expected to be completed in the coming days.

But Mr Cameron said the government would "further boost security by funding additional fencing to shore up as much of the perimeter as necessary. More Border Force search and dog teams will also be sent in."

He said: "We rule nothing out in dealing with this very serious problem."

The UK is offering to replace green mesh fencing at the Eurotunnel entrance perimeter in Coquelles, near Calais, with solid fencing of the type normally seen at Nato summits.

Calais migrant crisis

Impact on Kent council social services

629

the number of unaccompanied children seeking asylum that require care from Kent county council

  • 220 the equivalent number in March 2014

  • £5.5m funding shortfall according to the council

Meanwhile, Operation Stack - in which lorries queue on the M20 when Channel crossings are disrupted - is expected to continue into the weekend.

Ministry of Defence sources suggested land could be released for an alternative lorry park to help ease the backlog - but they dismissed reports that service personnel were poised to play any significant role.

Potential locations under discussions included the disused Manston Airport, in Kent, and Ebbsfleet International train station in north Kent.

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But Richard Burnett, chief executive of the Road Haulage Association, said Mr Cameron's proposals were "just sticking plasters" and the situation was "out of control".

UKIP leader Nigel Farage told BBC Radio Leeds freight could start moving again quickly if lorries were diverted to other ports, such as Ramsgate, and travelled via Belgium.

Former foreign secretary Jack Straw told BBC Radio 4's The World At One that the Schengen agreement - which allows border-free travel throughout Europe - was "only ever going to work in good times... You now see the price that Europe is paying".

At the scene

Image source, EPA

Lucy Williamson, BBC correspondent, in Calais

After dark, the nature of Calais' challenge becomes clear. Hundreds of migrants walking together along the highway that leads to the Tunnel site.

To get there they need to cross several fences and avoid security patrols.

Well before midnight, groups of several dozen were struggling under the freshly repaired fencing along Calais' railway line.

Some here have been discouraged by the growing number of police and television cameras. "The mood just doesn't feel right", one man told me.

But their long term goals remain and all the signs are that this week's new challenges - larger groups of migrants, better organised incursions - are becoming Calais's new routine.

What happens to UK asylum seekers?

Young migrants

The fourth night of disruption came as UK police and social services struggled to cope with the impact of events across the Channel.

Kent County Council asked Home Office officials for support in dealing with the arrival of hundreds of young migrants in Dover. In the last three months, the number of under-18 asylum seekers in the care of the council has doubled to 629.

Police officers from neighbouring forces have also been deployed to Kent to help with Operation Stack.

Image source, PA
Image caption,

Two migrants clinging to the roof of a lorry as it emerged from the Channel Tunnel in Folkestone, Kent

Image source, Getty Images
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Eurotunnel says incursions are now a nightly occurrence

Image source, PA
Image caption,

Thousands of lorries remain on the M20 in Kent