France takes in first refugees screened in Africa

December 19, 2017 - 11:00

France on Monday accepted a first group of 19 refugees identified in Africa under an overhauled asylum policy that will also see it expel thousands of economic migrants.

PARIS France on Monday accepted a first group of 19 refugees identified in Africa under an overhauled asylum policy that will also see it expel thousands of economic migrants.

While it has drawn little public outcry in France, the policy faces stiff opposition from the left and from charities that shelter migrants, 22 of which called in an open letter for France’s rights ombudsman Jacques Toubon to intervene.

Catholic charity Caritas France and a Protestant group wrote a joint letter to President Emmanuel Macron criticising “an unprecedented renunciation of (France’s) humanist values and traditions.”

Djamel, a refugee from the strife-ridden Central African Republic, arrived at Paris’s Charles de Gaulle airport with his wife and four children after spending four years at a camp in Chad, telling AFP: “Now we’ve no other family. Now you are our family.”

The new refugees -- also hailing from war-torn Sudan -- were brought to France from the camp in the Chadian capital N’Djamena where Djamel said around 1,000 people were sheltering.

The programme, which expects to identify 3,000 African refugees by 2019, aims to prevent people from risking their lives at sea.

More than 3,000 have died attempting to cross the Mediterranean in rickety boats since Europe’s migrant crisis started in 2015, according to the International Organisation for Migration.

Macron said last month that while he was “deeply committed” to France’s “tradition of welcome”, his government would be “inflexible” in its policy of expelling those who do not qualify for asylum.

The president acknowledged that the operation was at the mercy of “geo-political shifts” in the Middle East and migration caused by crises linked to global warming.

His so-called “migration hotspots” in Chad and Niger process the asylum applications of people already recognised as refugees by the UN refugee agency UNHCR.

Both are former French colonies in the semi-desert Sahel region of Africa.

The French government has launched a parallel programme in France to distinguish between asylum seekers and those in search of a better life in Europe.

The centrist Macron -- whose staunchly anti-immigration rival for the presidency, far-right leader Marine Le Pen, won one third of the vote in May -- has touted a tough policy towards economic migrants.

He drew praise from Le Pen’s National Front party, which on Monday claimed a “political victory” in the government’s focus on “the major problem of immigration”. — AFP

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