Attila the Hun
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Arsonists torch hostel set to receive migrants from Calais – as French police closing down the Jungle clash with refugees after officials run out of buses to transport them
Arsonists have torched a hostel set up to receive migrants from Calais as French police closing down the Jungle camp clashed with refugees when officials ran out of buses to transport them.
Riot police were involved in a tense stand-off with migrants as authorities tried to empty the squalid encampment in northern France this afternoon.
Hundreds of migrants are waiting to be transported to new accommodation around the country.
But in a sign of rising tensions over the operation, one of the reception centres earmarked for housing refugees was set on fire at Loubeyrat, in Puy-de-Dome, central France.
The vacant building's entrance and lobby was damaged in the attack which took place between Sunday night and Monday morning and an investigation is underway.
A statement from the local prefecture said: 'The Government strongly condemns this act which, apart from being criminal and dangerous, violates the republican values of France which offer refuge to people fleeing war and persecution. It is a duty which we cannot escape.'
It comes as pictures emerged of police in Calais battling to hold back a crowd of migrants and as authorities launched a three-day bid to clear the Jungle camp.
This morning, the operation was on the verge of stopping after authorities 'ran out of buses' - with migrants told to go back to the camp and try again tomorrow.
More than one thousand migrants, wrapped up against the cold and with their meagre possessions packed in suitcases, began queuing before dawn to be transferred from the camp this morning on the first day of the operation to clear the sprawling shanty town.
The migrants are being divided into four groups for families, single men, unaccompanied minors and other people considered vulnerable before taking one of 60 buses waiting to take them to 451 shelters nationwide.
But just hours after the operation started, there were reports this morning that French authorities did not have enough buses to take away all of those who had been processed - with many simply told they would have to try again tomorrow.
It comes just hours after riot police came under attack from migrants with stones hurled at police and items set on fire.
On the eve of the long-awaited operation to tear down the squalid camp, defiant migrants said they were staying put and would continue trying to get to Britain.
And as their protests turned violent, French police issued an extraordinary statement saying anarchists from a UK-based group have infiltrated the camp and are planning to disrupt the operation.
Arsonists have torched a hostel set up to receive migrants from Calais as French police closing down the Jungle camp clashed with refugees when officials ran out of buses to transport them.
Riot police were involved in a tense stand-off with migrants as authorities tried to empty the squalid encampment in northern France this afternoon.
Hundreds of migrants are waiting to be transported to new accommodation around the country.
But in a sign of rising tensions over the operation, one of the reception centres earmarked for housing refugees was set on fire at Loubeyrat, in Puy-de-Dome, central France.
The vacant building's entrance and lobby was damaged in the attack which took place between Sunday night and Monday morning and an investigation is underway.
A statement from the local prefecture said: 'The Government strongly condemns this act which, apart from being criminal and dangerous, violates the republican values of France which offer refuge to people fleeing war and persecution. It is a duty which we cannot escape.'
It comes as pictures emerged of police in Calais battling to hold back a crowd of migrants and as authorities launched a three-day bid to clear the Jungle camp.
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This morning, the operation was on the verge of stopping after authorities 'ran out of buses' - with migrants told to go back to the camp and try again tomorrow.
More than one thousand migrants, wrapped up against the cold and with their meagre possessions packed in suitcases, began queuing before dawn to be transferred from the camp this morning on the first day of the operation to clear the sprawling shanty town.
The migrants are being divided into four groups for families, single men, unaccompanied minors and other people considered vulnerable before taking one of 60 buses waiting to take them to 451 shelters nationwide.
But just hours after the operation started, there were reports this morning that French authorities did not have enough buses to take away all of those who had been processed - with many simply told they would have to try again tomorrow.
It comes just hours after riot police came under attack from migrants with stones hurled at police and items set on fire.
On the eve of the long-awaited operation to tear down the squalid camp, defiant migrants said they were staying put and would continue trying to get to Britain.
And as their protests turned violent, French police issued an extraordinary statement saying anarchists from a UK-based group have infiltrated the camp and are planning to disrupt the operation.
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