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The Independent UK
The Independent UK
World
Lizzie Dearden

Teenage refugee killed by Eurotunnel freight train

Refugees have tried to use Eurotunnel trains and the Channel Tunnel to cross to the UK (AFP/Getty Images)

A teenage refugee has been killed by a freight train near the entrance to the Channel Tunnel in France, while attempting to reach Britain.

The death, believed to be of a boy from east Africa, possibly from Sudan or Eritrea, came less than a week after a Syrian man was electrocuted while trying to board a train in Calais.

Officials from the local prefecture said the man's body was discovered at around 2am on Thursday morning by the emergency services. Calais-5-AFP.jpg Placard reading 'Beware : danger of death' is pictured in the Eurotunnel site in Coquelles near Calais,

"Upon arrival, they found the body of a migrant, believed to be a minor from Africa. An investigation is underway," a statement added.

Read more: Syrian refugee electrocuted on Channel Tunnel line
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A spokesperson for Eurotunnel said police and paramedics were called after a person was found unconscious on tracks near the French terminal overnight.

French newspaper La Voix du Nord reported that he was the twelfth migrant or refugee to die in France since the start of this year.

Several accidents have involved the Channel Tunnel, where people have been electrocuted, crushed by a freight lorry and fatally injured in falls.

At least three refugees have also died after being hit by vehicles on France’s motorways so far this year.

Some were crossing the country to reach Calais, after risking their lives to reach Europe in journeys over the Mediterranean or on Western Balkans route. In pictures: Calais crisis intensifies

An estimated 5,000 refugees and migrants displaced from countries including Syria, Libya and Eritrea are believed to be camped in and around the French port.

A surge in people attempting to cross the Channel earlier this year prompted a string of measures to increase security at the terminal, including extra fencing and the deployment of more border force search and dog teams

At its peak, which coincided with French ferry strikes, the number of attempts to board lorries or trains was around 2,000 a night but that figure had fallen to around 150 by the start of August.

Additional reporting by AP and PA

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