No one ought to ever need to die in a spot like this, on this sorry little bit of northern France the place these two Kurdish migrants have been shot. They died, surrounded by garbage, on a patch of unloved scrubland between a highway and a railway line.
The grass continues to be stained with their blood, and the blankets that wrapped them of their remaining moments now lie discarded. There are plastic packing containers, meals wrappers and empty Pink Bull cans subsequent to the purpose the place every man died. It’s a grim, desperately unhappy scene.
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Gunman fires at French migrant camp
Rehan and Ahmed are observing it, their faces lined towards the chilly, their feelings operating excessive. Each are Afghans who’ve come right here to Dunkirk to finish their journeys to the UK.
Each inform me they dream of a greater life, however each are bewildered by what occurred. That they had no concept that anybody else had been shot – they’d heard {that a} killer was merely concentrating on migrants.
What these murders have performed is to intensify tensions in migrant camps, referred to as jungles, which can be already unstable and threatening.
“We do not go out any more on our own,” says Ahmed. “It is too dangerous. We go out in groups. We get food during the day so we do not have to walk around at night. Every night I hear pistols firing. We don’t know who the people are with the guns. And now we are very, very worried.”
Rehan is 27 years previous. He left Afghanistan 13 years in the past, intent on attending to Britain, and studying wonderful English by watching years of YouTube movies. Now, half a lifetime later, he’s getting ready to reaching his ambition.
“The jungle is a terrible place,” he tells me. “It is so violent, but I won’t change my mind. I will stay here until I get to Britain. Then I will have a better life.
“I’m so unhappy for the individuals who have died right here – they needed the identical factor as all of us. Individuals say this can be a protected nation, however the jungle could be very unhealthy. We’re all human and all of us need a greater life. We’re scared within the jungle. It’s no life. However we’ll preserve attempting to get to Britain. We’ll go.”
I ask one other Afghan if he’s nervous after the assaults, however he shakes his head. “Am I scared? No,” he says, half-smiling. “I am from Afghanistan. And that is a very dangerous place.”
A gaggle of migrants involves the spot the place the killings occurred. Flowers are laid. A person weeps.
Everybody appears edgy, however it’s nervousness that’s shared. There’s a sense of camaraderie right here, a sense that, in an space the place so many individuals come and go, sheer luck determined who occurred to have been strolling previous when the photographs rang out.
All of them comprehend it may have been their blood discolouring the grass.