GETTY•REUTERS•EPA Thousands of people displaced the the Jungle camp have arrived in Paris

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Héloïse Mary, a charity worker, said the glamorous capital was now overflowing with refugees and more than 1,000 migrants had landed in the capital in less than two days. Many are now sleeping underneath the Stalingrad Metro station, a sordid migrant squat which has been evacuated more than once by the local authorities but to no avail. After a brief period of calm, ‘Stalingrad’ locals say the migrant situation has become a “living hell”.

Marie, who lives right next to the makeshift camp, told the French daily Le Figaro: “Life here has become unbearable. More than 2,500 squatters were evacuated in September, and now, less than two months later, they’re back. And now that the ‘Jungle’ camp has been closed, things are about to get even worse.” Another local, Monique, told Le Figaro that she was at “a loss for words” and “utterly distraught”. She said: “The streets are littered with rubbish and faeces. We can hear blood-curdling screams coming from the camp in the middle of the night.

GETTY More than 2,500 people were evacuated from the camp in September

“I’ve seen migrants throw stones at each other and use metal bars as weapons.”

The streets are littered with rubbish and faeces Local Monique

Local street cleaners whose job is to clear up the migrants’ mess are also fed up. One said: “Things have gone from bad to worse. “We’ve given the migrants rubbish bins but they don’t seem to care. We sweep and clean the streets every day.”

Riot police begin destroying migrant camps in Paris Mon, October 31, 2016 Overnight fires broke out in many parts of the camp destroying shacks and makeshift shops along the camps main street. Many migrants have left by coach to be relocated at centres across France. Play slideshow 1 of 43

GETTY The camp is situated underneath the Stalingrad metro station in the glamorous French capital

But one local says charity workers are to blame for the worsening refugee crisis: “They give the migrants tents to sleep in and feed them three meals a day. It’s no wonder people keep coming back. “Every time we tell them that the situation has become intolerable, they tell us that we have a roof over our heads, and that we should be grateful.”

GETTY More refugees have been arriving in the capital as the Jungle camp in Calais is demolished