Calais Clashes 'Stirred Up By British Anarchists' From Anti-Capitalist Protest Group No Borders

Calais Clashes 'Stirred Up By British Anarchist Group'
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British anarchists are among agitators who are stirring up trouble in Calais, where migrants and protesters stormed the port and boarded a ferry on Saturday, according to reports.

A number of Britons are said to be in Calais with No Borders, an anti-capitalist protest group accused of acting as agitators in the camp dubbed "The Jungle" that is home to an estimated 4,000 asylum seekers, the Press Association reported.

No Borders, however, say claims they led the action "couldn't be further from the truth", saying they were simply there to support migrants.

This couldn’t be further from the truth but the truth has never really been the concern of the UK media machine. The truth doesn’t sell newspapers and the idea that ‘refugees’ could autonomusly and easily board a boat in the Calais habour is incomprehensible for the British press.

The port was forced to close for several hours and security forces were drafted in on Saturday evening when a crowd of around 350 people, said to be refugees and supporters, infiltrated secure areas at the quayside.

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Migrants march in the French port city of Calais during a demonstration to support the migrants and refugees who live in the 'jungle'

A group of around 50 people, said to have been a mix of migrants and protesters, managed to board P&O's Spirit Of Britain passenger ship after breaching a chain link fence, interrupting services between Dover and Calais for around five hours.

French interior minister Bernard Cazeneuve said 35 people, including 26 migrants and nine activists, were eventually arrested for trespass and disorder offences.

According to The Sun one of the activists detained was a British man who was later released without charge.

Calais deputy mayor Philippe Mignonet called on British police to help French authorities identify any troublemakers.

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35 people, including 26 migrants and nine activists were arrested for trespass and disorder offences for storming the port and boarding a ferry

"It's frustrating having the anarchists and activists from England here to stir up trouble," he was reported as saying.

"I think the English police forces know who they are and should come here. It is too easy for these people to leave their country."

As the protest unfolded on Saturday there were ugly scenes when a small breakaway group, said to have been refugees and their supporters, descended on a residential property in Calais.

Video posted online shows a stand-off between the chanting group and two French men who come close to trading blows before being pelted with missiles.

At one point during the footage a man with a British accent shouts from behind the camera "Nazi scum". The protesters only back away when one of the men appears with an air rifle.

A local police chief claimed the No Borders group is predominantly made up of British activists.

Gilles Debove is reported as saying: "Ninety percent of the people involved with No Borders are from Britain. They stir up the migrants and cause us a lot of problems, they are political agitators."

Around 2,000 locals and business owners staged a demonstration in Calais town on Sunday in protest at the impact the crisis is having on the local economy.

The crowds waved "I love Calais" flags and a banner reading "My port is beautiful, my city is beautiful" was seen.

Local official Jean-Marc Puissesseau has estimated passenger numbers in the port have fallen by 40,000 compared to a year ago and the town's shops and restaurants are suffering, with blame pointed at the squalid refugee camp and repeated interruption to ferry and rail services.

Road Haulage Association chief executive Richard Burnett said Saturday's protest at the port was a "shocking breach of security" and called for the French military to be deployed.

On their website, No Borders, wrote of Saturday's uprising: "To reiterate, this was an action autonomously organised by people living in the jungle, people without papers, and refugees, these people were supported by activists from countries across the world.

"To claim anything different is to deny the reality of the situation, that the people of the Jungle are willing to disrupt, occupy, and fight the institutions that keep them from their freedom."