HRW: French police routinely abuse Calais refugees

Human Rights Watch says police often use excessive force on migrants in Calais, including on those who pose no threat.

Migrants Leave The Jungle Refugee Camp In Calais
Refugee families have for years temporarily settled in Calais in the hope of reaching England [File: Christopher Furlong/Getty Images]

French police routinely abuse refugees and migrants in the port town of Calais, Human Rights Watch (HRW) said in a new report, accusing authorities of turning a blind eye to police misconduct.

Wednesday’s report – titled Like Living in Hell – accuses police and riot squads of regularly using pepper spray on asylum seekers, including children, who do not pose a threat, such as while they are sleeping.

Hundreds of refugees in Calais still trying to reach the UK

Officers have also confiscated or pepper sprayed asylum seekers’ food, water, sleeping bags, blankets and clothes, the report added, saying that the conduct violates international standards of policing.

“It is reprehensible for police to use pepper spray on children and adults who are asleep or peacefully going about their day,” said Benedicte Jeannerod, HRW’s France director.

“When police destroy or take migrants’ blankets, shoes, or food, they demean their profession as well as harm people whose rights they’ve sworn to uphold.”

French authorities have denied the accusations in the report, which relied on interviews with 61 people. 

Fabien Sudry, prefect for the Pas-de-Calais region, said he “categorically denied the false and defamatory allegations” in the report, which he claimed, “have no evidential basis”.

“Police, of course, operate in Calais respecting the rules of law, with the sole objective of ensuring public order and security,” Sudry added.

‘They kick us’ 

For more than a decade France’s northern coast has been a magnet for refugees and migrants trying to reach Britain.

READ MORE: One day in Calais – The refugees hiding in the forest

In October last year, authorities dismantled the “Jungle”, Calais’ decrepit makeshift camp where thousands lived in the hope of climbing aboard trucks or trains to get across the English Channel.

But HRW said hundreds of asylum seekers and migrants, mostly Eritreans, Ethiopians and Afghans, are still living on the streets and in wooded areas in and around the port city.

“Every day, the police chase us. They use spray. They kick us. This is our life every day,” said Waysira L, a 16-year-old boy from the Oromo community, an ethnic group in East Africa.

Earlier this month, French police evicted some 2,000 refugees and migrants who had been sleeping in the streets of Paris.

The newly-elected French President Emmanuel Macron has said he intends to overhaul the country’s asylum system and install “a more human, and fairer” process. 

Refugees: Between worlds in Israel, Turkey and Greece – Al Jazeera Selects

Source: Al Jazeera, News Agencies

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