One of the group urged refugees waiting to enter Britain to
see his case as proof there is a way to reach the UK 'legally and safely'
Four Syrian refugees who had been living in the Calais
refugee camp known as "The Jungle" have arrived in the UK after a
landmark legal ruling.
Others carried signs and balloons saying "Welcome To
Britain" and "We Are One".
One of the group urged refugees waiting to enter Britain to
"have faith" and see his case as proof there is a way to reach the UK
"legally and safely.
The 17-year-old said conditions in "The Jungle"
were so bad it was "not fit for humans". "It is just
awful," he said.
The four refugees - three teenagers and a 26-year-old man
with severe mental health issues - travelled to the UK after a British court
ruled on Wednesday they should be immediately brought across the Channel from
the makeshift refugee camp in Calais.
The court found they should be allowed to come to live with
close relatives, who are already settled in the UK, while their asylum claims
are examined.
They had all fled the Syrian civil war and had been living
in the camp for at least two months.
Lawyers for the refugees argued the Home Office routinely
ignored the right of refugees to be united with family members already in the
UK, under a European asylum rule known as the Dublin III regulation.
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