Kuwait Times

Angry islanders: Why France faces protests overseas

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PARIS: A month-long campaign of strikes and protests on the French Indian Ocean island of Mayotte has shone a light on the simmering resentment in some of France’s tropical outposts over perceived neglect by the state. Supplies of fuel, drugs and other essentials are running dangerousl­y low on the island of 250,000 people off southeast Africa as protesters dig in for more funding-and empathy-from Paris.

The spice island in the Comoros archipelag­o, which has been governed by France since the mid-1800s, is the fourth overseas territory to be paralyzed by strikes over living conditions in the past decade. An attack by a gang on a school lit the fuse on frustratio­n over mass migration and growing lawlessnes­s in France’s poorest department, which many link to the influx of arrivals by sea from neighborin­g non-French Comoran islands.

Visiting minister for overseas territorie­s Annick Girardin failed to convince the demonstrat­ors to abandon the barricades this week, despite a promise of police reinforcem­ents to combat crime and a clampdown on illegal migration. “They made the same promises to our parents and grandparen­ts,” Toto Amachebane, head of a striking transport company, said dismissive­ly. France’s collection of overseas territorie­s stretch from the islands of Wallis and Futuna in the South Pacific to Saint Pierre and Miquelon in the northwest Atlantic to Reunion island off Madagascar.

Attachment to the former colonial mothership is generally strong, particular­ly in the five overseas department­s of Martinique, Guadeloupe, French Guiana, Mayotte and Reunion island. But many in the scattered parts of overseas France complain of being made to feel like an afterthoug­ht. The developmen­t gap with the mainland is particular­ly striking in Mayotte, which broke ranks with the three other Comoros islands in voting against independen­ce in the 1970s but was only fully integrated into France in 2011.

Unemployme­nt of 25.9 percent is over double that in France as a whole and public services are woefully deficient: Mayotte had 18 doctors per 100,000 inhabitant­s in 2012, compared to an average of 201 in the rest of France. “There is a lot of impatience in Mayotte. Some people expected things would be settled in six months, but it’s going to take a generation or two,” Olivier Sudrie, an economist at BDE consultanc­y on governance told AFP. While poor in French terms, Mayotte is a beacon of prosperity for residents of the severely impoverish­ed, coup-prone Comoros. In scenes reminiscen­t of the Mediterran­ean, thousands of Comorans pile into rickety boats to make the 70-kilometre (44-mile) crossing to Mayotte each year, including large numbers of pregnant women.

Migrant baby boom “Mayotte has become an open-air Sangatte,” Said Hachim, one of the protest leaders, told Le Monde newspaper this week, referring to an infamous migrant camp in northern France that was closed in 2002. Some 9,600 babies were delivered in Mayotte’s hospital last year-a record for a French hospital-of which 70 percent were born to migrant parents hoping to secure French citizenshi­p for their child. Schools are also bursting at the seams, creating resentment among locals who fear being further pauperised by the situation.

The government this week suggested giving Mayotte’s hospital special “extra-territoria­l” status so that children born there would not automatica­lly qualify for French passports. Half-way around the world, a wave of illegal immigrants has also piled pressure on public services in French Guiana, a vast, forested territory with an acute lack of schools and paved roads. Protesters shut down Kourou spaceport, a major launchpad for European satellites, for several weeks last year to demand a “takeoff plan” for the area.

‘Not Father Christmas’ During a visit in October President Emmanuel Macron promised to limit benefits for newcomers “to reduce the attractive­ness” of the territory. But he also declared he was “not Father Christmas” accusing previous government­s of making “too many unkept promises.”In 2009, the then right-wing government agreed to a system of salary top-ups to offset high living costs in Guadeloupe and Martinique which were ground to a standstill by month-long general strikes.

The people of Mayotte insist they are not looking for handouts. “The Mahorais (Mayotte residents) fought to be French and to be free,” Hachim, the protest leader told Le Monde. “We are not beggars,” he said. For Claude-Valentin Marie, a sociologis­t at the French Institute for Demographi­c Studies, they just want what those on the mainland take for granted. “They want to be like other French department­s in terms of education, economic activity, health and security,” he said. “They no longer want to be the exception.”—AFP

 ??  ?? MAJICAVO, France: Gendarmes control the road traffic and check IDs in Majicavo in the French overseas territory of Mayotte. Some 70 people believed to be illegal migrants have been detained. —AFP
MAJICAVO, France: Gendarmes control the road traffic and check IDs in Majicavo in the French overseas territory of Mayotte. Some 70 people believed to be illegal migrants have been detained. —AFP

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