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Brutal French government policy on undocumented immigrants
leads to tragedy
By Kumaran Rahul and Antoine Lerougetel
18 August 2007
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A 12-year-old boy fell from a balcony August 9 while trying
to escape with his father from a police raid on their fourth-floor
flat in Amiens, 120 kilometres north of Paris Five days later,
Ivan, from a Chechen refugee family, remains in a coma in the
hospital being treated for severe head and other injuries.
The tragic episode produced a wave of shock and revulsion throughout
the country against the methods being employed by the government
against sans papiers (undocumented immigrants). The morning
after the accident, some 300 people demonstrated through Amiens,
marching from the Pigeonniers council estate, where the family
lives, to the hospital. They carried placards saying, Mr
Police Chief (préfet) stop the round-ups,
No to the hunting down of children and parents, Sarkozys
laws kill rights.
The immigrant rights support group France terre dasile
pointed to the inevitability of such tragedies, given the
intensified effort to hound undocumented immigrants undertaken
by the newly-elected Gaullist UMP (Union for a Popular Movement)
governments minister for immigration and national identity,
Brice Hortefeux, a close friend and long-time collaborator of
President Nicolas Sarkozy. The group declared, We all knew
that such a policy of the systematic hunting down [of sans
papiers] could only lead to tragedies. The one in Amiens,
where young Ivan is between life and death ... is unfortunately
not the first. It will not be the last if this policy continues.
Ivans mother, Natalia Dembski, is Chechen, and his father,
Andreï Dembski, is Ukrainian. They left Grozny, the Chechen
capital devastated by the Russian military, in 1995. Since February
2005, six months after the Dembskis arrival in France, they
have made several requests for political asylum and residence
permits, all of which have been refused. Ivan had been at school
in France for two years and, according to his teachers, had been
doing brilliantly.
Sylvette Chevalier, who assists several sans papiers families
on the Pigeonniers estate, told the press that the family had
requested a re-examination of their case (recours gracieux):
We sent a letter a month ago, but there has been no reply.
On Monday Natalia went with Ivan to the police station. The police
told her to come back with her husband. They gave her no explanations,
but she guessed that it would be risky to go back They feared,
justifiably, that they might be arrested at the police station
and deported back to their country of origin.
The panic felt by the family when they saw numerous police
vehicles drawn up outside their building and heard loud banging
at their door, as well as the desperate attempt to escape arrest,
reflects the climate of fear consciously being generated by the
new Sarkozy government.
Thérèse Couraud, a 74-year-old former nurse active
in the Amiens sans papiers support movement, explained,
The hunting down of people makes them afraid ... Some prefer
to die by jumping out of the window rather than to be tortured
on returning to their country of origin. This week three others
received letters asking them to present themselves at the [police]
préfecture, without indicating what for. After that
we know they are locked up. We tell them not to show up, we take
them under our protection.
Thérèse continued, It really gives a gloomy
picture of France I was seven in 1940 and the situation with these
families brings to mind, for me, the round-ups during the war.
She uses the word rafles, the same word used to
refer to the mass arrests of Jews by the collaborationist
police of the Vichy regime of Marshal Philippe Pétain during
the Nazi occupation.
The immigrant support organisation CIMADE reported, You
now have massive systematic checks at certain places which evoke
round-ups [rafles]. Brigitte Weiser of Réseau
déducation sans frontiers (RESFEducation
without Borders Network) told the press that in Paris, The
prefecture has clearly decided to go up a gear. They are
taking advantage of the summer season: the schools would certainly
be on strike right now.
RESF, which is conducting a campaign in defence of victims
of the offensive against sans papiers, issued a statement
placing the blame for the accident on the government: It
is not an accident. It is the direct and ineluctable result of
the policy imposed on the préfectures and the police
by the government. The law enforcement agencies are subjected
to quotas for arrests (125,000 demanded by the minister) and deportations
(25,000).
The statement stresses, Yes, the sans papiers
are hounded by the police, even in their homes. It continues,
Other tragedies, less spectacular, are happening all over
France: as we write, 10 parents (fathers or mothers) of children
enrolled in schools are being held in detention centres by the
Paris police, awaiting deportation, and affirms that this
is only the tip of the iceberg. The deportations and the
methods the police are using against our neighbours must stop,
the statement urges.
The intensification of the crackdown on sans papiers
has been facilitated by Sarkozys filthy manoeuvre last summer
in the face of a mass movement against the deportations and harassment
of these families. As minister of interior, he declared a moratorium
for families with children enrolled in schools and promised that
over the summer holidays six to seven thousand families fulfilling
certain criteria would be granted legal status. Some 30,000 applicants
thought that they met the conditions and thus revealed their whereabouts
to the authorities. Subsequently, 23,000 requests were refused,
despite the fact that many fully met the stated criteria.
Hortefeux has denied any increased action against illegal immigrants
during the summer months. However, his spokesperson admitted that
a meeting of administrative departments had been held on
questions of procedure at the beginning of July, while denying
the existence of any written directives. But a government document
obtained by the daily Libération recommends that
the police proceed to checking on undocumented families at their
homes and asks the public prosecutor for coercion
in the case of failure to appear by people summoned.
The document also insisted on the inclusion of undocumented
immigrants on the FPR, the Wanted Persons List. Immigrants rights
organisations point out that whereas police incursions into sans
papiers homes used to be exceptional, Hortefeuxs
recommendations have made them commonplace. The vice president
of the Syndicat des Magistrats, the magistrates union,
Jean-François Zmirou, commented, I find it particularly
disturbing that prosecuting magistrates be used like this by the
Ministry of the Interior to serve its political programme.
While the sincerity and concern of the public against the witch-hunting
of illegal immigrants is unquestionable, the role of the left
parties must be noted. Under the Plural Left government of Lionel
Jospin, a coalition of the Socialist Party (PS), the Communist
Party and the Greens, 12,000 sans papiers were deported
annually (according to a Libération editorial August
11).
The 2007 Socialist Party presidential election programme included
strong anti-immigrant measures: We will carry out a policy
of firmness concerning illegal immigration ... Consequently we
must dissuade illegal immigration. When PS candidate Ségolène
Royal made a demagogic gesture in favour of sans papiers children
during her election campaign, she was obliged to recant within
hours. (See France:
Police attack defenders of immigrant school children).
The only political figure who participated in Fridays
demonstration in Amiens was Francis Lec, a Socialist Party lawyer
and regional councillor for Picardy, who acts for RESF in the
Somme department. Lec is demanding the full legalisation of Ivan
and his parents and full support for them by the social services,
pointing out that Hortefeuxs humanitarian gesture
of allowing the Dembskis to stay for six months while their son
recovers is a cynical refusal to recognise that Ivans injuries
will require medical attention for years. However, in his statement
reported in the press, Lec proposes no political campaign against
the anti-immigrant policies pursued by the entire French ruling
elite.
See Also:
French higher education law opens way
for privatisation
[14 August 2007]
France: Sarkozy government introduces
law restricting right to strike
[11 August 2007]
Sarkozy angers European Union
over Libyas release of Bulgarian medics
[30 July 2007]
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