Belgium has announced it has imposed controls on its border with France amid fears of an influx of migrants.
Up to 290 police officers would be deployed along the border, said Interior Minister Jan Jambon. The move comes as a French court deliberates over the legality of plans imminently to evict thousands of migrants from part of the «Jungle» camp in Calais. «They’re already on their way here,» Mr Jambon was quoted as saying.
He said the controls, which entail a suspension of the EU’s Schengen accord allowing passport-free travel, would last «as long as necessary».
The controls did not mean the border would be closed, he said, but «targeted checks» would be carried out – and those caught immediately deported. «We are going to guard the border in strategic places, chosen and known by police as potential smuggling routes.» Borders have been tightened and fences erected across Europe, in response to the arrival of more than one million migrants and refugees arriving on Europe’s shores in the past year. The majority have fled conflict in Syria, Afghanistan and Iraq.
No Tent Camps
French and British officials want to reduce the number of migrants in Calais and deter others from heading there in the hope of reaching the UK. Migrants gathered in the «Jungle» camp in Calais were told by authorities last week that they faced eviction from the southern portion of the camp. That has triggered fears in Belgium that the camp’s inhabitants will simply move on. «It’s our express intention to avoid tent camps like Calais in our country,» Mr Jambon said. He said 32 people had been arrested on Monday in Adinkerke, a Belgian village close to the French border.