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Besson said other, smaller camps scattered around the region
-- sheltering Iraqi Kurds and illegal migrants from other trouble spots
-- would also be cleared out this week. He said each migrant was being offered individual options, and that to date 180 have agreed to return to their homelands and 170 started applying for asylum in France. The others will be expelled from France, primarily to Greece, the point where most of the migrants first entered the European Union. "Expelling them will do nothing, just disperse them," the French rights activist group CSP59 said. For France, the "jungle" was inhumane and a sign of what is wrong with European immigration policy. The 27 nations that make up the EU each maintain their own immigration policy, complicated by some open borders, creating a soup of laws, accords and bilateral agreements. "France wants greater European solidarity," Besson told a news conference, saying he hopes all EU members will sign on to an immigration action plan at an Oct. 29-30 summit. Besson also rejected criticism that France was just passing the problem of illegal migrants on to Greek authorities. The U.N. refugee agency said Greece has been making it harder recently for asylum seekers to gain refugee status. The UNHCR said Greece granted only 379 people refugee status in 2008 out of 20,000 asylum applications. Greece says it detained more than 146,000 illegal immigrants in 2008, a 30 percent increase from the previous year. The U.N. agency has also criticized Italy for its immigration practices. Greece, Italy and Spain have repeatedly called for more help from the European Union to tackle the problem of illegal immigration. As many as 1,000 people at a time called the Calais "jungle" their home, but their numbers dwindled when it became clear police would act this week. In the camp before the raid, piles of garbage littered the scrubland. The illegal migrants, some as young as 14, baked flat bread over a fire in a tin drum. The only amenities were a spigot of water at the entrance, a homemade toilet hidden behind plastic and, in a scrupulously cleared area, a mosque made of blue tarp and ringed with pots of flowers. In 2002, authorities dismantled a Red Cross-run camp in nearby Sangatte, which had been used by illegal migrants as a springboard for sneaking across the Channel. The migrants kept coming back even after the camp was shut down.
[Associated
Press;
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