Aid workers are accusing France and Britain of failing more than 1300 unaccompanied child migrants whose future remains uncertain just before the French Government begins dismantling the filthy camp where they are holed up.
Charities operating in the makeshift camp dubbed the "Jungle" near Calais have criticised the slow pace at which British and French officials have processed the papers of children fleeing countries such as Syria, Afghanistan and Eritrea.
The UK Government has prioritised children and youths who can claim family ties in Britain and at the weekend a French Interior Ministry official said they were still negotiating over hundreds more with no such connections.
"All this should have been done a long time ago," Francois Guennoc from the charity Auberge des Migrants told Reuters today.
Allaodil, a Sudanese boy who says he is 14, was wandering through the Jungle's garbage-strewn mud alleyways, shivering underneath a blanket. "My brother has been in the United Kingdom, in Glasgow, for three years and has a job there," said Allaodil in faltering English, adding that he wanted to join his elder sibling.