French police have evicted hundreds of migrants after they set up camp under a metro station in Paris, reports The Daily Mail.
It was the third time in just two months that authorities have swooped to clear the site, at the Stalingrad metro in the east of the French capital.
Police descended on the camp at 6 a.m. and moved the migrants on to buses before they were taken to refugee shelters.
Up to 500 asylum seekers had been counted at the site on Sunday and three-quarters of them had been evicted within 90 minutes of the police operation this morning, local media reported.
According to daily Le Parisien, Secretary General of the Prefecture of Ile-de-France Sophie Brocas, said the migrants will be directed to centres in the area 'and the provinces'.
It is the third such evacuation in two months.
In March, nearly a thousand people were removed from the camp, which had mushroomed in the wake of the destruction of the Jungle camp in Calais.
The migrants, mostly from Sudan, Eritrea and Afghanistan, were housed in emergency shelters.
About 400 people were evacuated on March 7th and taken to shelters, but the camp quickly reformed.