The French government has recently opened a 1,500-bed container camp in the heart of the Calais Jungle, the migrant camp that has grown near the port of the northern city of Calais. But not everyone wants to stay in the containers. Some are suspicious of the handprint technology used to identify residents. Others say there is no sense of community in the containers. In this report, residents of the Jungle and volunteers weigh in on the new camp, and the general conditions for migrants in Calais.
Others episodes
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Podcast: France-Russia relations, hair discrimination, tax history
How France's new hardline position on Russia marks a major shift away from decades of pro-Russia policies. The fight to make hair discrimination illegal. And why VAT – a tax introduced 70 years ago – is so important to French finances, despite being deeply unequal.28/03/202430:18 -
Podcast: Covid obedience, vasectomies in France, was Rosa Bonheur a lesbian?
Four years after the start of the first Covid lockdown in France, what has been the impact? What's stopping more men getting vasectomies in France. And why not everyone wants to accept that Rosa Bonheur, the most famous female painter of the 19th century, was a lesbian.14/03/202428:55 -
Podcast: #MeToo hits French cinema, mobile movie theatre, leap year paper
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No quick fix for French farmers who have been protesting by laying siege to Paris. And it's just the latest in a long string of farmers' demonstrations over the last 100 years. Plus, why French girls are faring worse at maths than boys, and what to do about it.01/02/202431:46 -
Podcast: Fixing France, opposing immigration reforms, Françoise Giroud
A critique that highlights the gap between France and its ideals. Protests to try and block the new "racist" immigration reforms. And the story of Françoise Giroud, journalist-turned-minister in the 1970s.18/01/202431:47