French police clear hundreds of migrants from Paris tent camp
The residents of the camp were cleared out in an early morning operation. Police say such camps pose a security and health risk for the inhabitants.
Police in Paris evacuated a tent camp in the northern parts of the French capital city where some 1,000 migrants, mostly from Afghanistan and Sudan, were living in squalid conditions.
Hundreds of police moved in at dawn on Tuesday to remove the migrants, camped between major access roads into the capital.
The settlement at the Porte de la Chapelle area of the city was located just metres from a new refugee transit centre set up by Paris city authorities late last year to take asylum-seekers off the streets but which has limited space available.
These "illegal camps" present "major risks for the security and health of their occupants, as well as for local residents," Paris police said in a statement.
Police halted road traffic on a major crossroads in the north of the city in order to gain access to the camp, where a fight between migrants last month left several injured.
About 350 police were involved in the operation, along with some 100 municipal employees and staff from humanitarian groups.
"The government will take us into houses. I don't know where but it's fine," said Said, who said he had been sleeping outside for a month. "For some, it's been three months or more."
Last month, a huge fire gutted one of France's biggest migrant camps that housed 1,500 people near the northern French port of Dunkirk, which started after a brawl involving hundreds of Afghans and Kurds.
Europe has faced its biggest migrant crisis since World War II over the last few years as millions of people have fled war and poverty in the Middle East, Africa and South Asia.
France has welcomed only a fraction of the newcomers.