프랑스 북부 칼레의 난민촌, 이제는 소규모 도시로 변모해 How Calais' 'jungle' migrant camp has now become a mini city ..(VIDEO)

How Calais' 'jungle' migrant camp has now become a mini city - complete with restaurants, a theatre, book shops and free wifi




More than a dozen shops have opened, along with restaurants, libraries, an information centre and makeshift hotels

Main strip is the Market where an art gallery, theatre and Eritrean nightclub - which serves beer - are situated

Camp started as a stopping place for migrants as they waited to be smuggled illegally out of France to Britain 


프랑스 북부 칼레의 난민촌에는 음식점, 도서관, 정보센터 임시호텔 등과 

더불어 12개 이상의 상점이 문을 열었으며 사람이 가장 많이 이용하는 곳은 

갤러리, 영화관, 맥주를 먹을 수 있는 나이트 클럽 등 있는 마켓지역이다.


원래 이 캠프는 얼마전까지만 해도 프랑스에서 영국으로의 불법 밀수지역으로 

이용해온 난민때문에 출입이 금지된 장소로 지정됐었다.


by Ki Chul Hwang 

Conpaper  Editor Distributor 

황기철  콘페이퍼 에디터


By JOSH WHITE IN CALAIS FOR THE DAILY MAIL

When it opened in the spring, it comprised little more than a hotchpotch of tents on the sand dunes.


Eight months later, the notorious ‘Jungle’ migrant camp in Calais, has grown into a self-contained mini-city — a permanent magnet for people trying to get to Britain.


More than a dozen shops have opened, along with restaurants, libraries, and even makeshift hotels — and, inevitably, an information centre offering advice on how to get asylum in Britain.


Today: The notorious ‘Jungle’ migrant camp in Calais, pictured recently, has grown into a self-contained mini-city — a permanent magnet for people trying to get to Britain

Today: The notorious ‘Jungle’ migrant camp in Calais, pictured recently, has grown into a self-contained mini-city — a permanent magnet for people trying to get to Britain

June: When it opened in the spring, it comprised little more than a hotchpotch of tents on the sand dunes. The above shot shows the Jungle six months ago in June

June: When it opened in the spring, it comprised little more than a hotchpotch of tents on the sand dunes. The above shot shows the Jungle six months ago in June

 

The main strip, known as the Market, is the beating heart of the Jungle. There’s a dome-shaped theatre which doubles up as an art gallery and an Eritrean nightclub which serves super-strength beer (ironic considering that half of the country’s population are Muslims). A book shop (wittily named Jungle Books, presumably after the Rudyard Kipling tale) provides English and French classes. There are mosques and churches, including a wooden Eritrean and Ethiopian Orthodox church.


The camp, which replaced another that was demolished, started as a stopping place for migrants as they awaited an opportunity to be smuggled illegally out of France across the Channel into Britain.



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http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-3348594/Restaurants-theatre-free-wifi-Calais-Jungle-migrant-camp-mini-city.html

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