❓WHAT HAPPENED: Two Sudanese migrants are dead after attacks at a makeshift migrant camp.
👤WHO WAS INVOLVED: Two Sudanese migrants, Iraqi and Afghan suspects, Reform UK leader Nigel Farage.
📍WHEN & WHERE: The shootings took place near Dunkirk, France, on June 14.
💬KEY QUOTE: “For several consecutive days there have been shootings and hammer attacks at migrant camps in northern France. Two dead and several wounded. The gangs are getting more dangerous by the day.” — Nigel Farage.
🎯IMPACT: The violence underscores the criminality of some migrants looking to cross the English Channel illegally.
Two migrants who were likely looking to cross the English Channel illegally have been shot dead at a makeshift migrant camp along with five others who were wounded in attacks. The migrants, both Sudanese nationals, were killed on June 14 at a migrant camp near the French city of Dunkirk amid rising tensions at the camp.
Two of those injured in the attacks are a woman and a child who is only two years old. Two migrants, a 29-year-old Iraqi and a 16-year-old Afghan, have been arrested by police in connection with the slayings.
Reform Party leader Nigel Farage commented on the violence at the makeshift camp, which hosts around 1,500 illegal immigrants. “For several consecutive days there have been shootings and hammer attacks at migrant camps in northern France. Two dead and several wounded. The gangs are getting more dangerous by the day,” Farage warned.
Many who reside in the camp are looking to cross the English Channel by boat to the United Kingdom. So far this year, over 16,700 migrants have made it across the Channel, including over 900 in a single day in 14 small boats recently.
The leftist Labour government has claimed it will tackle criminal people smuggling gangs, but the number of arrivals is up 42 percent compared to last year, and one of its first acts on regaining office in last year’s elections was terminating a scheme to offshore migrants to Rwanda.
Many migrants who make it to Britain are housed in hotels around the country, costing British taxpayers as much as $10 million per day.
Join Pulse+ to comment below, and receive exclusive e-mail analyses.