The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Macron clamps down as France struggles to deal with migrants

- By Elaine Ganley

PARIS — It’s getting colder, the clock is ticking and regional authoritie­s are scrambling to meet President Emmanuel Macron’s deadline: get migrants off France’s streets and out of forest hideouts by year’s end.

That won’t likely happen, and Macron’s government is now tightening the screws: ramping up expulsions, raising pressure on economic migrants and allowing divisive ID checks in emergency shelters.

Critics contend that Macron’s increasing­ly tough policy on migrants — though wrapped in a cloak of goodwill — contradict­s his image as a humanist who defeated an anti-immigrant populist for the presidency, and has crossed a line passed by no other president in the land that prides itself as the cradle of human rights.

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.

Asylum opens the way for temporary housing, but only one-third of the 95,000 applicants this year were accepted, government officials say.

The huge makeshift camp in the English Channel port city of Calais, dismantled last year, was emblematic of the problems. Its residents were dispersed around France, but others keep coming in hopes of reaching Britain, and are finding a rude welcome. France’s highest administra­tive body said the migrants

have been subjected to inhuman and degrading conditions, and an investigat­ion ordered by the interior minister found that it was “plausible” that police used excessive force against migrants, as Human Rights Watch maintained.

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 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.

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.

The accent on security in dealing with immigratio­n has appalled even some who support the centrist Macron. In a first, a lawmaker from Macron’s young party broke ranks last week with critical remarks about the direction the country is taking on the immigratio­n issue. “All foreigners in France are not terrorists. All foreigners in France are not indelicate social aid fraudsters,” said Sonia Krimi.

Far-right leader Marine Le Pen, defeated by Macron in the May presidenti­al race, sees the direction the government is taking as a “political victory” for her anti-immigratio­n National Front party.

Feeling the heat, Prime Minister Edouard Philippe has announced consultati­ons starting Jan. 11 with mayors, lawmakers and aid groups that play a major role in helping to feed and house migrants.

 ?? THIBAULT CAMUS / AP ?? Migrants sit beside a makeshift camp Thursday in Paris. President Emmanuel Macron’s government is ramping up expulsions, raising pressure on economic migrants and allowing ID checks in emergency shelters.
THIBAULT CAMUS / AP Migrants sit beside a makeshift camp Thursday in Paris. President Emmanuel Macron’s government is ramping up expulsions, raising pressure on economic migrants and allowing ID checks in emergency shelters.

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