The 50 to 60 migrants, who escaped civil war back home, were likely to spend the night in the city streets of Calais after authorities in Britain refused to grant them legal entry there, a humanitarian aid group official said.
The migrants, including professionals like engineers and doctors, had been in a standoff with authorities after occupying a gangway that helps passengers get on board ferries that cross the English Channel. In a show of desperation, two scaled a nearby building and threatened to jump off.
Britain's Border Force issued a statement saying the standoff was for France to resolve.
Denis Robin, the state administrator in the region, said British authorities were willing to consider the cases one-by-one, such as if they can show they have kin already in Britain. In the meantime, France will consider temporary emergency lodging for them if they make formal requests for asylum.
But Vincent Deconinck, a regional official with the Secours Catholique charity, said the migrants have already faced an unkind welcome in France. He said nearly all left the port yesterday, and many were now likely to try to sneak across the English Channel illegally.
French authorities offered to provide those who make formal requests for asylum with housing in the nearby city of Arras, while they await consideration of the dossiers. Deconinck said only a few were likely to take up that offer.
"In Calais they weren't able to find a place, even to pitch a tent, to sleep," he said by phone. "They've been chased from one place to the next, they've been arrested, they have been handed orders to leave the country."
Mael Galisson of Migrant Services Platform, an aid group, said the migrants had occupied the gangway at the Calais ferry terminal since Wednesday, and police moved to evacuate them yesterday, but backed off after the two Syrians climbed onto the roof and threatened to jump.
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