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WSWS : News
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French police attacked in Guinea while expelling two immigrants
By Françoise Thull
10 September 2007
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On August 16, in the middle of the summer holidays, two immigrants
with no residence permits (known as sans-papiers), Diaby
Souareba and Mohamed Lamine Diaby, were expelled from France on
a Moroccan Royal Air flight to their country of origin, Guinea-Conakry,
a former French colony.
If the expulsion of Souareba and Diaby has received public
attention, in contrast to numerous previous expulsions that have
not been made public, it is because it triggered a diplomatic
incident between Guinea and France. The incident highlights conditions
faced by these workers and the growing attack on immigrants in
France.
The two sans-papiers had begun a hunger strike two months
earlier in Lille (in northern France) in a desperate attempt to
obtain the right to stay in France. Threatened with expulsion,
they participated in the occupation of a local trade union building
in Lille.
After the occupation was broken up, the two workers were taken
back to Guinea by a specialised team of police made up of six
members of the Border Patrol Force (Police Aux FrontièresPAF).
On their arrival in the Guinean capital of Conakry, the two men
accused the police of treating them inhumanely. Their assertions
were supported by several passengers.
As they got off the plane in Conakry on August 16, in addition
to the crowd that turned out to support them, Guinean police also
intervened in their favour. According to an August 23 article
on the Nouvel Observateur Internet site, a signed
interrogation statement by the PAF recorded that the
six police officers concerned claimed that they had been received
in Conakry by a reception committee that included two Guinean
police officers. One of them had hit one of the French
police, the statement continued. The police...were also
insulted and roughed up...in a hail of insults, receiving
a multitude of kicks and punches. Some Guinean police then
insulted them in the presence of a police chief... Colonialism
is finished, shouted one Guinean woman police officer according
to the same document.
The arrival of the two expelled men at Conakry airport was
known in advance, in part thanks to the action of a group known
as The Undocumented Immigrants Committee in the North [of
France] (CSP-59). A spokesman for the group, Saïd Bouamama,
explained to radio Europe 1, We have the principle here
that the people we have helped in the fight are not abandoned
at the time they are returned [to their home countries]. We therefore
have contacts with the family, and we keep in contact because
we want them to come back [to France]. It is around the families
of the expelled that the reception committees [in Guinea] are
organized and they are organizing the fight for the return, so
that these people can come back, and we are going to get organized
too.
The French government reacted by condemning the action as well
as the attitude of the Guinean police in Conakry. France demanded
an explanation from the Guinean government and an assurance that
this would not happen again.
The police trade unions also intervened in the aftermath of
the incident. They demanded measures for the protection of officers
in charge of expulsions.
The Foreign Affairs ministry immediately announced it had contacted
the Guinean authorities and that they had decided to organize
in liaison with our representatives, an adequate reception arrangement
to avoid the repeat of such incidents. The Interior Minister,
Michèle Alliot-Marie, of the Union for a Popular Movement
(UMP) added that the Guinean government had presented its
apologies to France. According an August 24 article in Le
Figaro, the Guinean government refuted this account, saying
it had only expressed regrets, because France
is the only country in the world which repatriates the citizens
of other countries without forewarning the authorities... If France
had alerted us, Guinea could have taken measures which could have
avoided this incident.
Moreover, the French government, in a provocative gesture towards
the victims of expulsions and with the aim of legitimizing police
actions, immediately publicly defended the six police officers
from the PAF who carried out the expulsion. They will be decorated
with a medal for courageous acts and dedication to duty.
The reaction of the Guinean Prime Minister Lansana Kouyaté
and President Lansana Conté was to minimise the facts.
The Guinean police however, confirmed the incident,
but contested the French police version by denying that
the Guinean police had laid hands on the French police.
Guinea-Conakry is a former French colony with a population
of just over 9 million. According to the United Nations
World Report on Human Development 2006, Guinea ranked
160 out of 177 countries in an index of development. The editor
of Guineas Solidarity summed up in a few words the
countrys situation on radio Europe 1: We are a developing
country whose population has no more than a dollar a day. The
families rely on all those who leave. Therefore seeing them return,
it is frustrating, its serious.
A cholera epidemic is currently plaguing the country and, according
to the Director of Public Health, Doctor Mohamed Mahy Barry, has
infected 1,764 people since January, causing 67 deaths. The town
most affected is the capital, which has been hit with 32 deaths
and 827 declared cases. Cholera, also called the disease
of the poor is a disease associated with the absence of
good hygiene, a sanitary infrastructure and adequate water.
On August 24, a one-day strike of bakers deprived most inhabitants
of bread in Conakry. The bakers were protesting against the increase
in the price of flour. The price of a loaf of bread has nearly
doubled, from 1,200 to 2,000 Guinean francs.
The demand for asylum on the part of Guineans has greatly increased,
not only for economic reasons, but also political. Anyone arrested
and perceived to be an opponent of the government is systematically
tortured, although the constitution forbids it. The resistance
of the two expelled Guinean sans-papiers reflects
the will of the population to fight against these living conditions.
The present government of Guinea-Conakry came to power earlier
this year following a general strike and uprising of the whole
population, which had lasted more than a month. A peaceful march
last January was subject to bloody repression by the state. The
new government had received the official support of Paris last
March. According to the radio-KanKan site, the French minister
for co-operation and development and French-speaking countries,
Madam Brigitte Girardin, travelled to Guinea the day after the
new government head, Lansana Kouyaté, took office, announcing
1.1 million euros in immediate aid.
The interest that the ex-colony represents for France is also
illustrated by the eagerness of the new rightwing Gaullist French
President Nicolas Sarkozy of the UMP, to warmly receive Kouyaté
in mid-June, even before the formal constitution of his government.
A budgetary aid package of 24 million euros was promised to the
Guinean prime minister.
The images of the immigrant expulsions from France, which are
the outcome of the daily harassment of undocumented workers in
particular, are broadcast by satellite television, thus transmitting
the growing violence of French police interventions. This has
not failed to exacerbate the anger of the population in Guinea
and in France.
After coming to power in May, Sarkozy has pursued anti-social
and brutal anti-immigrant policies that he had already applied
as minister of the interior in the former UMP government of Dominique
de Villepin. He hastened at the beginning of July, even before
his holiday in the US, to exhort his ministers to apply his governments
program with vigour, by means of official letters signed also
by Prime Minister François Fillon, and addressed to several
ministers.
In this way he reminded the minister for immigration, Brice
Hortefeux, of the governments objectives for expelling immigrants
from France. Some 25,000 expulsions were planned for 2007. In
this letter, the prime minister reaffirmed his determination to
do everything to meet the quotas for expulsions, saying: You
[the minister for immigration] will fix a ceiling for immigration
each year according to the different motives for settling in France,
and you will aim for the objective whereby economic immigration
represents 50 percent of the total flow of entries for long-term
settlement in France...You will take as a reference the policy
employed by some of our partners, for example, Canada or Great
Britain, who examine candidates for immigration in relation to
certain criteria, including geographical origin, and determine
their priorities as a consequence.
Since the final adoption on October 28 of the bill on the
law relative to the control of immigration, to the residence of
foreign nationals in France, and to nationality, the government
has reinforced its heavy-handed interventions.
As a consequence, many candidates for immigration, after having
indicated their personal details to the authorities, daily endure
police harassment. The Guinean population is all the more hostile
to these practises as the economic, social, and political situation
in this former French colony is catastrophic.
Taking into account the conditions that exist in many other
countries throughout the world, the case of these two Guinean
undocumented workers is entirely representative and underlines
the despair of all those who flee poverty in the hope of being
able to lead a decent life and provide for their families by working
in the more developed countries.
The real objective of the hunting down of undocumented immigrants
is to divide the working class according to race and ethnicity,
and at the same time to oppress the working population. The attacks
on immigrants rights are the testing ground for a general
assault on the rights and living conditions of the whole working
class.
See Also:
Brutal French government policy
on undocumented immigrants leads to tragedy
[18 August 2007]
Frances asylum procedures
condemned by European Court of Human Rights
[11 June 2007]
Mass strike movement in Guinea
[13 March 2007]
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