fawad: i think i'll be hungry tonight.o food tonight and we are out of luck because tomorrow at the breakfast place they are not serving proper breakfast. we'll just have a tea. reporter: our camera team buys fawad a few packets of food, so that he's got enough for tonight at least. neither rejected, nor accepted. fawad has ended up in limbo land, like so many other migrants arriving in france. host: in the meantime, fawad's situation has slightly improved -- he's now staying in a former barracks--so he has a roof over his head. but his future is still uncertain. ever since the end of communism, poland had been seen as eastern europe's strongest democracy and a model for struggling post-soviet states. that is, until last year, when the country made a sudden lurch to the right under the newly elected law and justice party. after poland's minister for justice removed about 140 prosecutors from their posts, many citizens are now worried that judicial independence in their country is under attack. they are fearful that their d