The news comes to us from the Associated Press via Powerline
and via Maggie’s Farm.
French president Emmanuel Macron is adopting a hard line on illegal
immigration. Considering that Macron worked for socialist president Francois
Hollande and that he defeated notoriously anti-immigrant candidate Marine Le
Pen, his actions merit attention. At the least, he is putting an end to the idea that France is a sanctuary country.
The AP lays it out:
From
snowy Alpine passes to the borders with Spain or Germany, migrants keep making
their way to France. In Paris alone, police have evacuated around 30,000 people
camping on sidewalks in the last two years.
No one
doubts that France’s system of dealing with migrants needs fixing, with a
perennial housing shortage and long wait times in applying for asylum.
“Living
in the street. Living in a tent. Sometimes you get food. Sometimes you not get
food,” said Samsoor Rasooli, a 25-year-old Afghan standing in line since 6 a.m.
to apply for asylum at a Paris facility, where some spend the night on the
sidewalk, strewn with filth, to keep their place. The door closed at mid-day,
the 100 places allotted that day for applicants filled.
“It’s
winter. I can’t sleep in the street,” Rasooli said.
Asylum
opens the way for temporary housing, but only one-third of the 95,000
applicants this year were accepted, government officials say.
The government will try to change immigration policy
legislatively:
A bill
overhauling asylum and immigration policy will be debated in the spring,
notably expediting asylum demands but also doubling to 90 days the time a
person without papers can be held in a holding center, the last step before
expulsion — an approach the government says is “balanced” and “efficient.”
Macron is refusing to accept economic
migrants and is expelling more illegals:
Macron
has made clear he wouldn’t accept economic migrants in France, wants those who
don’t qualify for asylum expelled and doesn’t want them even trying to come to
France.
The
French president has been rolling out a multi-pronged approach that stretches
to Africa, with points set up in Chad and Niger to pre-select those certain of
gaining asylum — and weed out potential economic migrants.
At
home, Interior Minister Gerard Collomb has ordered prefects, regional
representatives of the state, to crack down on illegal immigration, “act
quickly” to expel those who fail to gain asylum and report results within
weeks, according to a November order cited by the newspaper Le Monde.
A newer
set of orders in December rang alarm bells. Collomb told regional authorities
to set up “mobile teams” to run checks in emergency housing to ascertain the
status of migrants. Emergency shelters are considered bedrocks of the French tradition
of open arms to those in need and have long been considered untouchable, even
by security authorities.
Apparently, the French government had practiced an “open
arms” policy even before German Chancellor Merkel did. Now, the arms are being
closed and authorities are ramping up their searches for illegals.
Macron has also ordered that encampments of illegals in
Paris streets and elsewhere be cleared:
A camp
of about 40 Afghan migrants was dismantled last week in the Pas-de-Calais
region in northern France, and another was taken down in Macon in the east. On
Thursday, a camp on the banks of the Seine river was the latest in Paris to be
bulldozed, with 131 migrants taken to shelters.
Police
staked out a tollbooth north of Paris in an operation against the “migrant
flux,” stopping car after car to check for migrants who don’t have residency
documents.
Of course, some politicians have rebelled. But since Macron
is a center left politician, and has the support of the political right… the
opposition can do very little:
Patrick
Weil, among France’s leading immigration specialists, said Macron “tweets about
human rights and refugees during the day and at night gives the opposite
orders.”
Weil
contended on BFM-TV that Macron’s approach is “the most extreme we’ve had since
the war.”
It’s
coated “with a smile, with bonbons, but in practice it’s a dagger,” he said.
Could it be that Macron is taking his inspiration from
President Trump, and not from President Obama. We understand that Angela Merkel
was practicing the Obama citizen-of-the-world, open borders politics. Now,
Macron, who presided over last July’s Bastille Day celebration with Donald Trump at his side, has taken a different tack.
One notes with amusement that America's foreign policy
elite is bemoaning the fact that Donald Trump has caused American influence in
the world to decline. True, Obama is still the most popular
American president around the world—obviously, the peoples of the world were
happy to watch Obama diminish the USA while elevating the prestige of everyone
else.
And yet, from Paris to Riyadh to Beijing, Donald Trump has been treated
with more respect than the hapless Obama. Go figure.
Ah, reality looms it's head and Macron does what he needs to do..........to keep his job. Maybe.
ReplyDeleteI think the French, Germans, and Swedes could do a lot more and accommodate many, many more migrants. They're not out of Euros and Kronor yet. Macron is a deplorable, xenophobic, bitter clinger.
ReplyDeleteI'd think he might like economic immigrants, IF they had skills, could speak French, and really, really wanted to work. I doubt that 3-horse parlay will pay off...
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