"Having heard legal argument, the court has ruled that the
prosecution against this defendant should continue and the matter is
fixed for trial on June 20," she said.
A judge refused on Friday to halt the criminal damage trial of a refugee from Darfur who walked through the Channel Tunnel in one of the most dramatic attempts to reach Britain since Europe's migration crisis began.
Abdul Haroun's
case has prompted debate in Britain between critics who want him
prosecuted to deter others from attempting the 50-km walk through the
railway tunnel from France, and supporters who say he should be free to
start a new life.
His trial had been set for June and Judge Adele Williams ruled at Canterbury Crown Court in southeast England that it should go ahead.
"Having
heard legal argument, the court has ruled that the prosecution against
this defendant should continue and the matter is fixed for trial on June
20," she said.
Haroun, 40, was arrested in
August 2015 as he neared the English end of the tunnel at Folkestone,
having walked in darkness for some 12 hours, dodging passing trains
along the way. He was charged with obstructing a railway.
He spent five months in prison until he was granted asylum on Dec. 24 and freed on bail on Jan. 4.
Thousands
of migrants have been camping in squalor around Calais at the French
end of the Channel Tunnel, trying to get to Britain by stowing away on
trucks or trains. Haroun is the first known to have made it on foot.
The
operator of the Channel Tunnel, Eurotunnel, said on Thursday that extra
security measures introduced last year had ended disruptions caused by
migrants trying to get to Britain.
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