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NewsOctober 25, 2016

CALAIS, France -- France began the mass evacuation Monday of the makeshift migrant camp known as "the jungle," a mammoth project to erase the humanitarian blight on its northern border, where thousands fleeing war or poverty have lived in squalor, most hoping to sneak into Britain...

By ELAINE GANLEY ~ Associated Press
A 16-year-old migrant from Ethiopia cries Monday as he waits to register at a processing centre in the makeshift migrant camp known as "the jungle" near Calais, France.
A 16-year-old migrant from Ethiopia cries Monday as he waits to register at a processing centre in the makeshift migrant camp known as "the jungle" near Calais, France.Emilio Morenatti ~ Associated Press

CALAIS, France -- France began the mass evacuation Monday of the makeshift migrant camp known as "the jungle," a mammoth project to erase the humanitarian blight on its northern border, where thousands fleeing war or poverty have lived in squalor, most hoping to sneak into Britain.

Before dawn broke, long lines of migrants waited in chilly temperatures to board buses in the port city of Calais, carrying meager belongings and timid hope they were headed to a brighter future, despite giving up their dreams of life in Britain.

Closely watched by more than 1,200 police, the first of dozens of buses began transferring them to reception centers around France where they can apply for asylum. More police patrolled inside the camp, among them officers from the London police force.

Authorities were expected to begin tearing down thousands of muddy tents and fragile shelters today as the migrants vacated them.

Migrants have flocked to the Calais region for nearly two decades, living in mini-jungles.

But the sprawling camp in the sand dunes of northern France became emblematic of Europe's migrant crisis, expanding as migrant numbers grew and quickly evolving into Europe's largest slum, supported by aid groups, and a black eye on France's image.

"It's not good, the jungle," said 31-year-old Mahmoud Abdrahman of Sudan. "Eating not good. Water not good, shelter not good, no good toilets."

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He said he would leave today when lines were shorter, gesturing to a black knapsack that was packed to go as proof he was ready.

Ultimately, Abdrahman said, he wanted one thing.

"I need peace," he said. "Anywhere."

Home to migrants from Afghanistan, Sudan, Eritrea, Syria and elsewhere, the closing of the camp fell like a stone on many as the reality of the evacuation sunk in and plans had to be made. Uncertainty and a lack of precise information left many fearful.

"What should I do?" asked a 14-year-old newly arrived Afghan.

"It is really hard because we have found some good friends over here," said Tariq Shinwari, a 26-year-old Afghan.

The camp shutdown left some -- like Imran Khan, an Afghan who was fingerprinted in another country before coming to France --with a tough choice: Get on a bus and risk expulsion or go on the run as winter approaches. Under European rules, asylum seekers must be returned to the country where they were fingerprinted on arrival.

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