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Sudanese Channel Tunnel walker admits obstruction charge | Sudanese Channel Tunnel walker admits obstruction charge |
(35 minutes later) | |
A Sudanese man found walking through the Channel Tunnel to Britain from France has pleaded guilty to an obstruction charge. | A Sudanese man found walking through the Channel Tunnel to Britain from France has pleaded guilty to an obstruction charge. |
Abdul Rahman Haroun, 40, who was found inside the tunnel last August, appeared before Canterbury Crown Court. | Abdul Rahman Haroun, 40, who was found inside the tunnel last August, appeared before Canterbury Crown Court. |
He was granted asylum in the UK after he was apprehended while walking near the end of the 31-mile (50km) tunnel. | He was granted asylum in the UK after he was apprehended while walking near the end of the 31-mile (50km) tunnel. |
Haroun was sentenced to nine months but walked free from court because of time already served. | |
He changed his plea to guilty before his trial got under way. | |
During the hearing, the court heard Haroun's description of his walk through the tunnel. | During the hearing, the court heard Haroun's description of his walk through the tunnel. |
'Persecuted by militia' | |
He described the speed of the trains passing through and said: "When I saw the trains coming I had to hold on to metal pieces on the wall of the tunnel." | He described the speed of the trains passing through and said: "When I saw the trains coming I had to hold on to metal pieces on the wall of the tunnel." |
Haroun's journey saw him travel for a month to Egypt and on to Libya before he crossed the Mediterranean to Italy. From there he made his way to Calais. | |
In an interview with the Home Office, Haroun described how he fled his home in 2004 after he was persecuted by the Janjaweed militia. | |
He ended up in a camp at the Kari-Yari dam on the Sudan-Chad border. | |
After his arrest, he told police: "I came here for protection and to be safe." | |
Prosecutor Philip Bennetts QC told the court that when Haroun was asked how he got into the tunnel, he said: "I came from France, always trying to get here." | |
He said he jumped over the perimeter fence by himself before "walking sometimes on the right and sometimes on the left" inside the tunnel, Mr Bennetts said. | |
Haroun had pleaded not guilty to "obstructing an engine or a carriage using a railway" before Medway magistrates last August. | |
On Christmas Eve, the Home Office recognised him as a refugee and granted him asylum. |