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Huge traffic jams in southern England due to French border controls

Tighter French border security and insufficient staff numbers combined to cause massive queues of holidaymakers heading to continent via port of Dover.

La rédaction de Mediapart

This article is freely available.

Thousands of British travelers are experiencing a nightmare start to their European summer vacations as they find themselves stranded in huge lines of traffic trying to reach the port town of Dover, reports CNN.

Some motorists were forced to sleep in their cars as they became stuck in the backlog, caused by a glut of vacation season traffic encountering heightened security checks by French border officials at the port.

Dover, just 42 kilometres (26 miles) across the English Channel from the French port of Calais, is a key departure point for ferries to France, while the entrance to the Channel Tunnel is in nearby Folkestone.

French border officials, who are carrying out heightened checks in response to the terror threat in France, screen passengers in Dover before they depart from the UK.

P&O Ferries, which runs services from Dover, tweeted at one point early Sunday morning that delays on the A20 motorway were up to 12 hours, with a further two-hour wait once travelers reached the port.

One traveller, Amy Capron, tweeted that it had taken her 17.5 hours since becoming stuck in traffic just 10 miles from the port before she was finally able to board her ferry.

"I normally love 'em, but today I am cursing the French!" she tweeted.

Kent police said Sunday that delays of up to 10 hours were still being experienced on the A20, and that disruptions were expected to continue for the next two days.

The delays were due to French government requirements for heightened security checks on those entering the country following recent terror attacks, Highways England said in a statement. France has been under a state of emergency since the Paris terror attacks in November, when ISIS jihadists killed 130 people.

Highways England warned of major backlogs at the Port of Dover and the Eurotunnel, as Britons headed for European getaways at the start of the summer vacation season.

The Port of Dover said in a statement that the problem had been exacerbated by French border control posts being "seriously understaffed," with only three of a potential seven booths operating for tourists overnight.

"At one stage, only one French officer was available to check passengers on hundreds of coaches, resulting in each coach taking 40 minutes to process," said the statement.

It said the port raised concerns over the staffing levels to the British government earlier in the week, who in turn relayed them to French officials.

The UK Border Force is now being mobilized to help French officials clear the backlog, Britain's Home Office says.

On social media, some asked whether the lack of staffing at the border was a French payback for Britain's recent vote to leave the EU.

The Port of Dover advised passengers to consider delaying their travel or make sure they had adequate food and water supplies if they decided to travel anyway.

Read more of this report from CNN.