The Calais Jungle was a refugee and illegal migrant encampment in the vicinity of Calais, France that existed from January 2015 to October 2016. 3000 migrants stayed at the camp while they attempted to enter the United Kingdom, or while they waited for their French asylum claims to be processed. French authorities cleared the Calais camp in October 2016 and another camp in Dunkirk in September 2019. Aid groups later reported that many former jungle residents had moved to the streets of Paris.
Statistics are shown for this demographic
Parish
Response rates from 166 B4 6 voters.
82% Yes |
18% No |
82% Yes |
18% No |
Trend of support over time for each answer from 166 B4 6 voters.
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Trend of how important this issue is for 166 B4 6 voters.
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Unique answers from B4 6 voters whose views went beyond the provided options.
@974V27W2yrs2Y
Yes, as long as their parents are legal immigrants
@9D8DQBP1yr1Y
If the family live in France they should stay in France. If their parents are in Britain the children should join them
@9F7VSL61yr1Y
Yes, but not in the UK, but in France where they should be.
@9DT5Y7V1yr1Y
Yes, but not if they are illegal immigrants.
@9DLN43Z1yr1Y
Yes, if the parents have been granted asylum
@9T6PZMS3mos3MO
The children and their families should be in France, not the UK. Asylum should be for temporary safety, not to fulfil economic desires.
@9R6ZB584mos4MO
Yes provided those parents complete background checks to determine if they are safe enough to look after the child.
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