The Calais border barrier is an international border barrier under construction jointly by France and the United Kingdom designed to prevent illegal migrants from gaining access to the Channel Tunnel and from the port of Calais as a means of illegal entry to Britain. Construction, funded by Britain, began in September 2016.[1]
Calais border barrier | |
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Characteristics | |
Entities | France United Kingdom |
History | |
Established | September 2016 To prevent illegal migrants from gaining access to the Channel Tunnel and from the port of Calais as a means of illegal entry to Britain |
It aims, in particular, to prevent migrants from entering Britain by stowing away on trucks and ferry boats. The wall will cut the large migrant encampment known as the Calais Jungle off from access to the port and tunnel entrance.[2] The government of Calais opposes construction of the wall, preferring that the central government instead dismantle the Jungle because the illegal migrants living there place a strain on local resources.[2]
The $23 million cost will be shared by Britain and France.[3]
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ "Calais migrants: Work begins on UK-funded border wall". BBC. 20 September 2016. Retrieved 29 September 2016.
- ^ a b McAuley, James (29 September 2016). "France and Britain just beat Donald Trump to building a border wall". Washington Post. Retrieved 29 September 2016.
- ^ Iaconangelo, David (14 January 2017). "From the wall to the burqa: why the politics of immigration is all about big symbols". Christian Science Monitor. Retrieved 25 January 2017.