Port Of Calais Closed After 50 Migrants Storm P&O Ferry

Migrants Storm Ferry At Calais
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In this Friday, July 31, 2015 photo, a ferry is parked in the port of Calais, France. Calais, with its huge port bringing visitors across the Channel by ferry, its Eurostar train which stops in nearby Frethun and its highways, is a natural hub for travelers, but they are going somewhere else. (AP Photo/Thibault Camus)
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Some 50 migrants stormed a ferry docked in Calais on Saturday, causing French authorities to close the port. The Migrants made their way on to the ship sparking a "security incident."

Speaking to Reuters, deputy Calais prefect Denis Gaudin said: "A demonstration in Calais has drawn around 2,000 people and in the end around 200 people entered the port, with approximately 50 of them boarding a ferry, the 'Spirit of Britain', on an external deck."

Gaudin added that some refugees left the ferry voluntarily and police would remove the rest.

The Port of Dover released a statement saying Calais was experiencing "migrant activity.”

"The Port of Calais is currently experiencing migrant activity which has caused disruption to ferry services," the statement read. Therefore services to and from Calais via the Port of Dover are affected, but DFDS Seaways services are still running to Dunkirk as normal."

"The Port of Dover remains open for business, but the duration of this disruption to services remains unknown."

Earlier on Saturday, Jeremy Corbyn visited a French refugee camp, bemoaning the conditions as a "disgrace."

The Labour leader visited a camp in northern France to see first-hand the squalid conditions refugees and migrants are living in after fleeing war and persecution.

Corbyn travelled the to the Grande-Synthe Camp, near Dunkirk, where more than 2,500 people are sleeping rough in the mud, wet and cold.

"These conditions are a disgrace anywhere," he said. "We as human beings have to reach out to fellow human beings."