Calais Crossing
Posted: Sat Sep 05, 2015 6:37 am
I've heard that there are (or were) large migrant camps around the chunnel in Calais. Are these people mostly from one region or are their origins fairly heterogeneous?
All over the place - mostly Syrian these days I think, for obvious reasons.Tholian_Avenger wrote:I've heard that there are (or were) large migrant camps around the chunnel in Calais. Are these people mostly from one region or are their origins fairly heterogeneous?
On a similar note, isn't France (due to recent events) becoming less tolerant, along with a strain of far-right anti-migrant politics working its way in from the Low Countries?Graham Kennedy wrote:From what I've read, the UK has a pretty generous welfare state, and is quite soft on the whole immigrant/refugee thing. It's one of the best places you can go to in Europe if you're a migrant looking for a place to live.
I thought all countries in the European Union had a standardized policy of immigration and citizenship.Graham Kennedy wrote:From what I've read, the UK has a pretty generous welfare state, and is quite soft on the whole immigrant/refugee thing.
I don't believe he's referring to the effects of policy so much as people like Geert Wilders being given more widespread credence and political clout.Tholian_Avenger wrote:What are you afraid of Teaos? Reduction of social benefits, reduced immigration, a decline of cultural civility resulting in street level harassment, death camps, or what? I'm not being sarcastic here.
For those that are already EU citizens, yes. For those coming outside of the EU to live in EU states while there are EU guidelines the matter is largely down to the external immigration laws of the country in question.Tholian_Avenger wrote:What are you afraid of Teaos? Reduction of social benefits, reduced immigration, a decline of cultural civility resulting in street level harassment, death camps, or what? I'm not being sarcastic here.
I thought all countries in the European Union had a standardized policy of immigration and citizenship.Graham Kennedy wrote:From what I've read, the UK has a pretty generous welfare state, and is quite soft on the whole immigrant/refugee thing.
Thank you for clearing that up Reliant.Reliant121 wrote:For those that are already EU citizens, yes. For those coming outside of the EU to live in EU states while there are EU guidelines the matter is largely down to the external immigration laws of the country in question.Tholian_Avenger wrote:I thought all countries in the European Union had a standardized policy of immigration and citizenship.
Trains are very long and provide plenty of access points to stow away. So it's more like a line segment than a point. I would guess there must be such a high rate of traffic that it is impractical to completely secure a train before transit.sunnyside wrote:During my vacation in the UK there was a headline about building an "iron wall" around the tunnel. I was surprised that it's so difficult to secure a single point of entry. Was it just not a concern until recently?