Married Calais Jungle charity boss beds toyboy migrant and ‘sets up love nest with refugee’ after boasting of zero-tolerance sex policy
A MARRIED charity boss had a year-long secret fling with a migrant toyboy lover while working at the Calais Jungle, The Sun can reveal.
Clare Moseley, 46, fell for Tunisian conman Mohamed Bajjar, 27, after meeting him at the migrant camp where she founded Care4Calais.
The former accountant had spoken out only last year about her charity’s zero-tolerance policy on sex between volunteers and migrants - but the pair's relationship was well-known among migrants and volunteers.
Bajjar, 27, was previously exposed by The Sun for posing as a Syrian refugee in the Jungle after conning a British woman to get married in Tunisia.
And earlier this month Clare, 46, dumped Bajjar, known as Kimo, fearing he had conned her out of thousands of pounds.
Pals claim Bajjar then threatened to tell Clare’s husband about the affair and send him photos of the pair together.
Clare set up Care4Calais in 2015, co-ordinating donations of clothing, food and tents to the Jungle.
It soon gained charity status and was visited twice by The Voice judge will.i.am. The Guardian named Clare one of “Six Women who made 2015”.
She soon moved in with ex-market trader Bajjar, who worked as her bodyguard and translator. A pal said: “She fell for Kimo in a big way and is now worried she could lose the charity.
“Everyone on the camp knew about them. Migrants thought they were husband and wife.”
But it all went sour earlier this month when Clare accused Bajjar of conning her after he begged her for cash to send to his family.
He was arrested on January 6 on suspicion of stealing Clare’s mobile phone but was released.
That night Clare fled France to see her husband Benjamin, 38, at their £700,000 five-bed home in the Wirral, Merseyside, fearing Bajjar would spill the beans.
But she is now back in the French port less than a mile from Bajjar, who is living above a clothes shop.
Challenged about the affair by The Sun at her rented house last night she said: “Is that it? It’s complicated.”
Another friend said: “She knew it couldn’t carry on. She went home to try to save her marriage but Kimo isn’t letting go.
“It’s sickening that she has been so vocal about volunteers not having sex with migrants.”
Charity boss Clare Moseley
CLARE Moseley left her husband and business behind after footage of the Jungle made her cry.
Hubby Benjamin found her sobbing at their £700,000 home in August 2015 — days later she had founded Care4Calais.
The former accountant had been a director for a brand strategy company.
She sparked fury by saying drivers who complained about attacks by migrants should get a different job.
Toyboy lover Mohamed Bajjar
IN December 2015 The Sun exposed Mohamed Bajjar as a conman living in the Jungle who was posing as a Syrian refugee fleeing IS.
He appeared in TV news reports as an asylum seeker trying to sneak into the UK.
He married a British woman in Sousse, Tunisia, after a whirlwind romance and she paid £1,500 for his visa.
She has since cut all ties with him.
Last September volunteers writing on Facebook said the Jungle was awash with prostitution, underage sex and volunteers having multiple migrant partners.
At the time Clare said Care4Calais had a zero-tolerance policy toward relationships between volunteers and migrants.
She added: “It isn’t recognised as an official refugee camp, it’s an illegal settlement. So we’ve no way of forcing anyone to leave.”
One male volunteer was reported for sex with migrants, she said.
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The Jungle was torn down in November and 10,000 migrants were moved to camps across France or given asylum in Britain. Care4Calais remains in the town.
Clare was photographed leaving Calais police station on Thursday after spending an hour with the local police commissioner.
A Care4Calais spokesman said the meeting was about refugees and was unrelated to Bajjar.
He added: “Our priority remains to support and protect refugees in Calais, many of whom are fleeing unthinkable violence and horror, and this will not distract us from that vital mission.”