I was attacked by migrants in French small boat camp with Chris Philp | Politics | News


Shadow Home Secretary Chris Philp has been left “frightened for our country” after he was attacked at a migrant camp in Dunkirk.

The Conservative MP was visiting the camp, known as Jungle 2, with the Express when a migrant pulled out a foot-and-a-half-long machete in what appeared to be an attempt to intimidate him. As he fled the camp, Mr Philp was also pelted with bottles of beer – one of which narrowly missed the Tory frontbencherโ€™s head by inches. Rocks were also thrown at the Expressโ€™ vehicle.

Mr Philp said he was scared that the same people whoโ€™d targeted him could potentially be boarding a dinghy for Britain in the next few days.

He said: โ€œI was concentrating on [the conversation I was having] when somebody walked past and pulled out some kind of machete, and then we had to leave pretty quickly.

โ€œIt makes me feel frightened for our country. The people who pulled a knife and pelted me with bottles could be in the UK tomorrow and put up in a hotel next to your family or my family.โ€

โ€œIf the people in that camp are willing to use violence against an elected Member of Parliament, then I’m terrified and determined that we need to take the proper action. This needs to stop.โ€

Mr Philp, who believes he is the first MP to visit the giant makeshift settlement, said the incident had not cowed his desire to travel to France and urged his opposite number, Yvette Cooper, to travel there and bear witness to the migrant crisis firsthand.
He added: โ€œThis was an unsettling experience, but it is important for members of Parliament to actually find out what’s going on on the ground.

โ€œWhen you actually see what is happening for real, you realise how serious this border crisis is and that the government is just not doing enough.

โ€œI’m going to be taking [what Iโ€™ve seen] back into the House of Commons Chamber and put it directly to Yvette Cooper, the Home Secretary, when Parliament returns in a few weeks’ time.

โ€œShe obviously has not been anywhere near that camp, and I don’t think understands exactly how serious this border security crisis is.

โ€œI think itโ€™s important that democratically elected members of parliament in the UK actually are willing to take the risk, frankly, to go in there and find out what is actually happening on the ground instead of listening to the government’s sort of sanitised propaganda and the propaganda of some of these refugee charities put out as well.โ€

Prior to the violent outburst, Mr Philp was speaking to migrants in the makeshift settlement who had been spotted carrying luminous orange lifejackets and were walking back from the beach.

Some claimed not to speak English or denied they were travelling to the UK, but others admitted to saving money for the trip and had heard about hotels hosting new arrivals. Mr Philp said from what heโ€™d gathered, it was evident that the UK was their final destination.

โ€œWhat is clear is they could, if they wanted to claim asylum in France and get looked after by the French government,โ€ he said. โ€œThey are here in France. Many of them said they travel to countries like Greece and Italy on the way here.

โ€œBut they’re determined to get to the UK. When I explained that it was illegal, they didn’t care at all and some of them thought it was easy to work illegally in the UK.โ€

On a day of calm seas and soaring heat it is believed three boatloads of migrants made from the beaches of Northern France.

They added to more than 50,000 who have crossed the English Channel in small boats since Labour came to power last summer, a milestone reached faster than Conservative administrations, and which Mr Philp said was an indictment of Keir Starmerโ€™s failed policies.

Mr Philp had spent the morning tracing the routes in Gravelines used by small boats heโ€™d seen crossing the Channel a week earlier on a boat trip with the Express and raged about a lack of action from the French police in stopping migrants attempting to travel to Britain.

Surveying the horizon on a large beach which this week had more than a hundred migrants board dinghies from, Mr Philp couldnโ€™t believe how this had been the spot where so many successful launches had taken place.

โ€œLooking at the beach, you would think it wouldn’t have taken much for the French police to see what’s happening,โ€ he added. โ€œAs the migrants made their way across the sand, they could have stopped it and that would have prevented illegal migration.โ€

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