Friday, 29th March 2024
To guardian.ng
Search

France holds five migrants who rode Britain-bound ‘solidarity’ bus

French police on Sunday detained five of some two dozen migrants who took part in a "solidarity march" staged by rights activists who had set off from southern France headed for Britain in late April. The 24 migrants were ordered off a bus at the northern port of Calais as it was about to board…

Some of the 50 migrants board a waiting bus as they leave the immigration hall at Roissy-Charles de Gaulle airport on the outskirts of Paris on July 5, 2018, after arriving on a flight from the Mediterranean island of Malta.<br />France has granted asylum to 52 people rescued by the German charity boat Lifeline in June, which was also stranded for days last month after picking up migrants in distress off the Libyan coast. / AFP PHOTO / Thomas SAMSON

French police on Sunday detained five of some two dozen migrants who took part in a “solidarity march” staged by rights activists who had set off from southern France headed for Britain in late April.

The 24 migrants were ordered off a bus at the northern port of Calais as it was about to board a car ferry to cross the Channel, a local official told AFP.

The five are expected to be deported, while the others were let go because their papers were in order or their asylum applications were in process or completed, authorities said.

Activists of the Collectif des Sans-Papiers de Paris (CSP 75) decried the move, heading along with dozens of others to the Calais police station beating drums and shouting “Free Our Comrades”.

France’s Human Rights League (LDH) also demanded their release, saying “these people… are now deprived of their freedom for having participated, in a visible way, in a protest for a more open and welcoming world.”

Francois Guennoc of the French charity L’Auberge that co-organised the march acknowledged that the group should not have been allowed to cross into Britain, but “what shocks us is that they were taken to a detention centre even though we were accompanying them and their presence was known.”

Speaking from across the Channel in Dover, he added that the protesters had told French and British authorities that they had intended to take their protest into Britain only “for the day”.

Guennoc and the other activists were expected to arrive in London later Sunday.

Several hundred people took part in the “solidarity” action for migrants, a series of relay marches that kicked off in the immigration hotspot of Ventimiglia, on the border between Italy and France, in late April.

The organisers arrived Saturday in Calais after the 1,400-kilometre (870-mile) journey.

In this article

0 Comments