Andrew Anglin
Daily Stormer
October 26, 2016
Around 200-300 French CRS police are blocking the entrance back into the #CalaisJungle which is on fire. pic.twitter.com/VFo1ipiNn1
— Jack Parrock (@jackeparrock) October 26, 2016
Burn baby burn, Allah’s inferno.
TIME:
Large areas of the Calais ‘Jungle’ were ablaze Wednesday, as more than 1,200 French police and government officials continue to tear the squalid camp down.
Crews first began dismantling the northern France migrant camp, home to roughly 6,000 individuals, late Monday. Roughly 1,900 left the slum voluntarily that day to travel to around 450 temporary residential centers across France. This followed clashes last weekend between migrants and officers, with authorities firing tear gas into the crowds to restore order.
Firefighters extinguished several dozen fires early Tuesday set by migrants as they left the makeshift camp – including a fire in the main alley through the camp which burned overnight. Steve Barbet, a spokesman for the regional prefecture, told the Associated Press on Wednesday that one migrant was slightly injured and taken to the Calais hospital. About 100 people were evacuated to a no man’s land at the entrance of the camp during the night.
Fabienne Buccio, who manages police, security and government policy in the area, told the agency Tuesday night that migrants “have a tradition” of burning their shelters before leaving. AP reported that some laughed as an aid group’s truck burst into flames.
lol @ “it’s their cultural tradition.”
Once again, the may-mays are real.
It’s apparently finished.
Officials clearing the sprawling Calais “Jungle” migrant camp have achieved their aim and should be able to close the processing center that is dispersing people around France by the end of Wednesday, the region’s top government official said.
“Mission accomplished,” Calais’ regional prefect Fabienne Buccio told Reuters.
I guess it’s time to start rebuilding.
These childrens need a place for themselves in France. A place from where they can attack cars and trucks. It’s a part of their tradition.