TETEGHEM, France (AP) — A Mercedes and a BMW,
both with British license plates, sit in a forest clearing on the edge
of a small migrant camp in northern France. Everyone here speaks in
whispers, or not at all. Bullet holes pock two shipping containers
sheltering migrants, all trying to get to England, helping to explain
the silence.
People
smugglers who get rich off desperate migrants span the globe, and their
tentacles extend into nooks and crannies like Teteghem, a small town
outside Dunkirk. Here the smuggling kingpins are firmly in control, and
growing nasty.
“Don’t come see me in the camp,” said a
typically cautious Iranian migrant in the parking lot of a local grocery
store, where talking is easier. “Problems,” he added, putting his
finger to his head. “Bang!”
An Iraqi migrant was wounded by gunfire in
mid-August, caught in the crossfire of score-settling among smugglers,
said Teteghem Mayor Franck Dhersin. This month, police chased a Mercedes
driven by a suspected smuggler into a ditch at the camp entrance, the
shattered glass and skid marks visible a week later. An 18-year-old
Syrian displayed his bandaged right leg and a hospital report stating
that “metallic” objects were removed — police bullets according to
migrants, metal from bullet-punctured containers hit by smugglers, says
the mayor.
Few French know of the town of Teteghem, but
some migrants first heard the name in a phone call before ever leaving
their homeland. It is described by Mayor Dhersin and others as a
drop-off point for a band of people smugglers taking in Syrians, Iraqis
and Iranians; ultimately, officials believe, the gang is locked into a
Britain-based network that may stretch to Kurdish regions of the Middle
East.
The migrants are among thousands of desperate
travelers who pass through northern France trying to sneak onto trucks,
ferries or freight trains to Britain, where they hope to find a better
life.
Robert Crepinko, head of the Organized Crime
Network at Europol, the European Union’s law enforcement agency,
estimates there are roughly 30,000 suspected people smugglers operating
in the 28-nation EU, with most living within the bloc. Some smugglers
even advertise their services on social networks like Facebook, he said.
Crepinko says the current influx of migrants has opened new business opportunities in the organized crime world.
“Criminals who would normally deal with drugs
or would normally deal with money laundering … with other forms of
crime, are using this opportunity and are making criminal profits out of
the migrant crisis,” he told The Associated Press in a telephone
interview.
He refused to estimate the monetary gains of the people smuggling market, saying only it is “very lucrative.”
Crepinko makes a distinction between human
traffickers — in which there is always a victim, be it sexual
exploitation, forced labor or forced marriage — and people smugglers who
provide services for people who want to go from Point A to Point B.
At the small Teteghem camp, migrants are stuck in a murky limbo short of their goal.
The camp, with a spigot of running water,
public toilets and eight bright green shipping containers with
electricity to shelter migrants, is high-end compared to others in
France, such as the huge, squalid migrant ghetto in nearby Calais.
Smugglers haunt all the camps of northern France, but they reign in tiny
Teteghem; many of the migrants owe their foothold in Europe to the
gangs, sucking the newcomers into an orbit of intimidation.
Interviews with the mayor, Dunkirk’s top state
official, police and migrants provide a picture of a camp in the grip
of smugglers that local police cannot defeat.
Sitting on an artificial lake, the Teteghem
camp is a near-perfect smugglers’ haven, strategically located just off a
highway that leads east to Belgium and west to the Eurotunnel site
outside Calais, a magnet for migrants trying to cross the Channel. Its
population has recently swelled with the refugee crisis that has brought
nearly a half-million migrants into Europe so far this year, going from
80 to 374 at the latest count. The rise also reflects the backlog in
all camps due to a security crackdown at the Calais border. Small tents
now dot the Teteghem site.
The camp’s relatively comfortable amenities were installed 15 months ago, paid for with public funds under the mayor’s orders.
Today, Dhersin deplores the consequences of
what he bitterly calls his five-star camp, saying improvements mean
smugglers have become the decision-makers. They place migrants with more
means in the camp, decide who lives in containers instead of tents —
and charge migrants to stay. “I’m enriching the smugglers,” he said.
Police are now regularly seizing smugglers’ cars in the camp, like the two with British plates seen hidden in the forest.
“It’s my way, as mayor, to make war on the smugglers,” Dhersin said.
The cars, with steering wheel on the right
side, indicating a British make, are mainly used to transport their
charges to truck stops or ports, like Zeebrugge in Belgium, according to
the mayor and a ranking French border police official. Cars can be
specially hired in Britain for the risky job of picking up migrants and
hiding them in the trunk, said the official. He spoke on condition he
not be named because he was not authorized to speak publicly.
The police official said that in one instance
smugglers sneaked 150 people to Britain for 4,000 euros per person. He
would not elaborate on the case. “It’s like a gang,” but the people keep
changing, said an Iraqi migrant, wearing a woolen cap with ear flaps
against the chilly night. And, he said, you never know who the people
transporting you are.
“Someone takes you from Paris to here, another
one will take you from here to the U.K. … They have masks on their
face,” said the Iraqi, who, like other migrants in the camp, refused to
be named out of fear of the smugglers. He said he was never sure where
he was during his 20-day journey from Iraq to Teteghem, a trip he said
cost $15,000, with a promise to cover the last leg to Britain.
By all accounts, the Teteghem camp is
controlled by Kurds. Many migrants in the camp are from the same Kurdish
towns or regions: Sardasht in Iran, or Hasaka in Syria or Kirkuk in
Iraq; the last two have been besieged by the Islamic State group.
Migrants and an aid worker in the camp in nearby Grande-Synthe say Kurds rule there, too, with weapons and terror.
“I’ve seen more than 20 guns at this camp,”
said a 29-year-old Iranian man at the Grande-Synthe camp. He said he
fled Iran because he was hounded by police after converting to
Christianity.
The border police official, who has spent
years tracking smugglers, confirmed that smugglers are often armed and
that Kurds are the main presence in Dunkirk. He said they often come in
at night to “establish order, resolve problems.”
Kurds are not the only smugglers. Thirteen
networks have been dismantled in northern France since the start of the
year, the last two in August — both run by Albanians installed in Calais
and Dunkirk. But when a network here is “decapitated” it quickly
rebuilds itself, said Sub-Prefect Henri Jean, the state’s highest
representative in Dunkirk. “The lieutenant becomes captain,” he said.
“They have recruitment methods to ensure the network reconstitutes
itself quickly.”
Local officials and police are convinced that
smugglers in the region are answering to bosses in Britain, some likely
of Middle East origin. France works closely with both judicial and
police officials in Britain and Belgium to take down the operations,
Jean said.
Networks vary, Europol’s Crepinko said, making
it difficult to find a common denominator, adding that a single network
may not be responsible for all stages of the journey.
“But we do (sometimes) see a link between
criminal activities from the place of departure through the travel and
up to the place of arrival, the destination country,” he said.
Migrants in Teteghem or nearby Grande-Synthe wait eagerly for the promised final leg to Britain.
“They come to you during the night when it’s
dark. They take you,” the Iranian at Grande-Synthe said, describing the
hoped-for moment when the smugglers fetch him for his trip to Britain.
“Every night I am waiting.”
No comments:
Post a Comment