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Migrants risking lives to board Calais trucks

&nbsp;<span style="font-family: 'Lucida Grande', 'Lucida Sans Unicode', 'Lucida Sans', LucidaGrande, Geneva, Arial, Verdana, sans-serif; ">Migrants try to board UK bound lorries on the main road into Calais ferry port</span>
 Migrants try to board UK bound lorries on the main road into Calais ferry port  Migrants try to board UK bound lorries on the main road into Calais ferry port (Philip Toscano/PA)

Migrants were risking life and limb trying to brazenly clamber aboard UK-bound trucks in Calais, with some saying they will do whatever it takes to cross the Channel.

French police had reportedly found 350 migrants hidden in cars and trucks between 6am and 10am this morning.

As trucks slowed in queueing traffic on the main road leading to the Port of Calais, migrants swarmed around them in an effort to stow away.

One was seen to climb on to a lorry’s roof, while two others managed to break in to the back of a slow moving HGV with the help of a third migrant.

One migrant, a 20-year-old Syrian called Yazan, said: “I need to get to England. I came here via Turkey and Greece and now I’m living in the jungle in Calais. The situation here is very bad. But life in Syria was worse. Our homes were destroyed and our government used chemical weapons against us. I need a better life in England and I will do whatever it takes.”

Polish trucker Martin Szczygielski (33) said the migrant situation had reached crisis point and lorry drivers faced daily threats of intimidation and fines.

He said: “My friend had four immigrants in his truck and the police gave him a £2,000 fine but it was not his fault because he checked the trailer. It’s very hard and dangerous to earn a living here.”

The scenes came 24 hours after Calais descended into chaos as the Channel Tunnel was shut and migrants exploited a wildcat strike by French ferry workers by trying to board UK-bound trucks.

French ferry protesters burned tyres and hay bales, gridlocking roads leading to the port, while migrants tried to take advantage of slowing and stationary lorries by clambering on board.

Dozens of migrants were seen in helicopter footage walking by the sides of motorways looking for opportunities to jump on to lorries destined for Dover.

More problems ensued as French ferry workers striking over fears they will lose their jobs then trespassed on to Eurotunnel tracks, forcing services to be aborted.

Trains were also not able to run after MyFerryLink demonstrators started a fire outside the French terminal, Eurostar said.

The day of problems came amid the worsening migrant plight near the Port of Calais where numbers camped there have swelled to more than 3,000 since April.

Aid workers have reported a “catastrophic” situation, with predictions that some 2,000 more migrants displaced from war-torn countries including Eritrea, Syria and Afghanistan could arrive over the summer.

Volunteers from l’Auberge des Migrants say up to 50 new migrants were arriving every day at the camp, dubbed the Jungle II, and there were not enough supplies or food.

British travellers were being urged to keep vehicle doors locked in traffic and when unattended in Calais, in advice from the Foreign and Commonwealth Office (FCO).