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WSWS : News
& Analysis : Europe
: France
French immigration policy and the death of Baba Traoré
By Senthooran Ravee
25 April 2008
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On April 5, Baba Traoré, an undocumented, 29-year-old
Malian immigrant in France, died of a heart attack after jumping
into the Marne River while trying to escape a police control at
Joinville-le-Pont station.
Traoré arrived in France in 2004 to give a kidney to
his sister, who is 40 this year and lives in France after marrying
a Frenchman. Professor Christophe Legendre, a leading practitioner
of kidney transplantation at the Necker Hospital in Paris, had
requested that Traoré come to France for the transplant.
A bachelor, Traoré lived with his sister and worked for
cleaning and maintenance agencies. His authorization for residency
expired in 2007 and his request for its renewal, which he had
asked for on medical grounds, was denied.
In an interview with Radio-J, government spokesman Luc Chatel
called the event a tragedy, but quickly added that
a citizen who is following the law submits to police controls.
Chatel continued: My thoughts go out to the family of
this young man; its a tragedy that affects all of us. But
I would like to relate the facts: it was as he tried to escape
a control by railway police that this young Malian ran away, that
he had an unfortunate fall, and that he drowned.
In the final analysis, however, Traorés tragic
death is not a chance event due to an unfortunate fall,
but the result of the electoral calculations and state policy
of the current French government.
President Nicolas Sarkozy won the May 2007 presidential elections
partially on the basis of his appeal to the far-right, anti-immigrant
votea theme that he sounded again in trips to Frances
Mediterranean coast during the March 2008 local elections.
Shortly after coming to power, Sarkozy named his collaborator,
Brice Hortefeux, Minister of Immigration, National Identity, and
Co-development. In a June 1, 2007 article in the conservative
daily Le Figaro, Hortefeux announced that the government
was fixing a number of 25,000 illegal immigrants, which local
authorities would be required to find and deport. He said, We
will remain very firm: the objective for 2007 is 25,000 deportations.
Undocumented aliens have no claim to remain in France, but rather
should be brought back to their country of origin, voluntarily
or by force.
It soon became clear that local authorities could not find
25,000 illegal immigrants to deporthighlighting the arbitrary,
politically motivated character of the numerical targets set by
Sarkozy and Hortefeux. In early September, Hortefeux invited 19
local prefects to the Ministry of Immigration to criticize them
for not meeting their deportation targets.
One police union official, Joaquin Masanet of UNSA-Police,
told the daily Libération: We have to be careful
about all this pressure on the local prefects, which risks coming
down the police hierarchy. Public service workers arent
there to examine everyone. Were not going to put a policeman
on every block, in each restaurant or each company to come up
with numbers to meet expulsion targets.
By that point, however, police raids were already taking a
deadly toll on undocumented immigrants. Twelve-year-old Ivan in
Amiens was left in a coma on August 10 after falling from a fourth-story
window while trying to evade immigration police. Also in August,
24-year-old Tarek jumped out of a high-rise building to escape
police in Toulouse. A Chinese immigrant, Chunlan Liu, jumped to
her death on September 20, 2007, trying to escape police in downtown
Paris.
On February 15, 2008, Kenyan immigrant and athlete John Maïna,
who feared torture should he be expelled back to Kenya, committed
suicide upon learning that his request for asylum had been definitively
rejected.
Ultimately, 21,000 immigrants were expelled from France in
2007. Held in overcrowded detention centers, immigrants have held
protests and hunger strikes to publicize the terrible conditions
there. On April 17, five policemen were briefly held at the General
Inspectorate of Services (IGS) for questioning of their conduct
during a February 11 protest by immigrants held at the Vincennes
retention center. According to the daily Le Monde, They
used electroshock pistols and were filmed by surveillance cameras.
Prisoners were hospitalized after this intervention.
A study by the Cimade humanitarian organization, quoted by
Le Monde, found that 35,000 immigrants had been placed
in collective detention centers in 2007. It found that immigrants
had five days in which to request asylum, but were required to
fill out asylum forms even though they were denied tables or pens
on the pretext that they might be used as weapons. Among the immigrants
held in the detention centers were 242 children, even though French
law shields them from these deportation procedures. Last year,
one immigrant committed suicide in a Bordeaux detention center,
and two detainees attempted suicide by self-immolation in Lyon.
More perceptive figures in the French ruling class, while questioning
Sarkozys whipping up of right-wing sentiment through anti-immigrant
policies, have expressed concern that this agenda will ultimately
provoke widespread revulsion in the working class. In September,
former Prime Minister Dominique de Villepin worried that other
countries where similar policies were being carried out had not
gone through the round-ups [les rafles] of
Jews during the Nazi Occupation of France, when French police
followed orders from the SS and Gestapo to find Jews living in
France to deport to Nazi extermination camps.
Baba Traorés death led to a wave of demonstrations
and protests. On April 5, 6, and 12, hundreds of people marched
in Joinville-le-Pont, including Nagnouma Komé, Traorés
sister, who told the press she couldnt understand
the circumstances of her brothers death. She added, Baba
could have been saved, the police could have dived in to rescue
him, but they didnt want to save Baba, who didnt know
how to swim and was afraid of water.
Bahija Benkouka, who coordinates a pro-undocumented immigrant
alliance, the 9e Collectif des sans-papiers, told AFP,
The anti-immigrant manhunt has human tragedy as its consequences,
and it risks continuing if Sarkozy goes in the same direction.
Regularizing immigrants situation is the only just and humane
solution.
Other pro-immigrant associations expressed their opposition
to government policy. Nathalie Serré, spokeswoman for the
UCIJ (United against a Disposable Immigration) group, said, Events
show unfortunately that government policy kills, and we want to
stress this now, when in three months France will want to impose
its policy on the entire European Union, when France takes
on the EUs rotating presidency.
The Movement against Racism and for Friendship between Peoples
(MRAP) issued a statement saying, After these repeated tragedies,
and with the risk of further ones, it is absolutely urgent to
put an end to the manhunts for undocumented immigrants by an immediate
end to all expulsions.
Shortly after Traorés death, on April 15, hundreds
of undocumented workers began ongoing strikes in restaurants,
cleaning, and security firms. Without recourse to the courts to
force employers to grant regular pay and social benefits, these
immigrants are among the most exploited layers of the working
class.
According to a report in Le Monde, the British Council
and the Migration Policy Group recently released a report on conditions
for immigrants throughout Europe. Le Monde writes, According
to the six criteria studiedaccess to work, family regroupment,
long-term stay, political participation, access to citizenship,
and non-discriminationFrance ranks 11th.... Citizens of
other countries residing legally in France must satisfy the most
stringent conditions of the 28 [European] countries for family
regroupment and long-term residency.
See Also:
France: Massive police raid
on Villiers-le-Bel
[20 February 2008]
France: Police-state measures
against immigrants provoke resistance
[16 January 2008]
Detained immigrants on hunger
strike in France: We refuse to be treated as sub-humans
[4 January 2008]
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