France Announces Tough New Measures on Immigration – The New York Times

Posted: Published on November 6th, 2019

This post was added by Alex Diaz-Granados

PARIS President Emmanuel Macron of France tried to seize control of the issue of immigration on Wednesday, as his government announced steps to make the country less attractive to migrants while cracking open the door to skilled foreign workers.

The combined moves were a bid by Mr. Macron to wrest the issue from his main political challengers, the far-right National Rally of Marine Le Pen, which for years has skillfully used immigration in its political ascent.

With critical municipal elections just months away, Mr. Macron has shifted right and begun talking tough on immigration, especially on the perceived abuses of Frances generous social welfare system, hoping to keep Ms. Le Pens party, formerly known as the National Front, at bay.

Among Mr. Macrons new get-tough measures is a provision that asylum seekers would have to wait three months before qualifying for non-urgent health care.

In addition, officials said that informal migrant camps in and around Paris would be cleared by the end of the year, as the government confronts a growing and visible problem in many French cities.

But the government also announced that, starting next year, it would for the first time establish a system of annual quotas to grant visas to skilled immigrants looking to enter France.

We want to regain control over our immigration policy, Prime Minister douard Philippe said.

While that may have been the intention, the announcement did as much to underline the political peril the issue presents for Mr. Macron, a centrist whose shape-shifting has often dissatisfied French voters across the political spectrum.

The measures drew immediate criticism from both the right, who said they didnt go far enough, and the left, who said Mr. Macron was unnecessarily endangering the already vulnerable population of asylum seekers for political ends.

In recent weeks, Mr. Macron who as a presidential candidate lauded Chancellor Angela Merkel of Germany for saving Europes collective dignity through her pro-migrant policies during the height of the crisis in 2015 had been setting the stage for Wednesdays announcement.

In a long interview on the presidential plane with a right-wing magazine, Valeurs Actuelles, Mr. Macron recently said the authorities had been lax in expelling those who had entered France illegally.

My goal is to throw out everybody who has no reason to be here, he said.

In an interview on Radio France, Ms. Le Pen said that the government was addressing the issue of immigration simply because of the municipal elections, scheduled for March. She said the measures would be ineffective in reining in illegal immigration.

Theyre talking about immigration because they think its enough to talk about immigration to the French to make them believe that solutions are being brought, Ms. Le Pen said.

Nearly 124,000 people requested asylum in France last year, a record number and an increase of 23 percent from the previous year. The requests came mainly from Afghanistan, Syria, Sudan and Frances former African colonies, but also from Albania and Georgia, two countries that France says respect human rights.

The increase in asylum seekers has exacerbated housing problems, overwhelming shelters established by the government.

In Paris and other cities, groups of migrants, often numbering in the hundreds, have set up tent cities or are squatting in unused buildings. Nearly 3,000 are estimated to be living on the streets in northern Paris and an adjoining suburb.

The authorities have regularly expelled migrants from specific sites, leading them to move elsewhere, in a continuing cat-and-mouse game.

Those expulsions have increased with the governments tougher line on immigration, according to advocates for the rights of immigrants.

Since last summer, the government has been really pushing to close down these camps without offering any solution for those who find themselves on the street, said Yann Manzi, the president of Utopia 56, a group that assists migrants in Paris.

The number of asylum seekers in France has risen, migrant support groups say, as part of the continuing effects of the migrant crisis that reached a peak in 2015.

According to the European Union law governing the process, known as the Dublin Regulation, applicants must request asylum in the first country they set foot in, and remain there. But many end up moving to a second country. Those who have gravitated to France are called Dublins, in reference to the law.

Nations like Italy and Greece argue that the system presents an unfair burden on them. But France, Germany and others have stepped up efforts to send migrants back where they landed.

With countries unable or unwilling to rapidly process applications, migrants have been stuck in limbo for years, or ended up wandering inside Europe, said Pierre Henry, the director of France Terre dAsile, a migrants rights group.

You have 200,000 to 250,000 people who are being sent back and forth in Europe like Ping-Pong balls, Mr. Henry said.

Mr. Macrons government has increasingly adopted arguments that some migrants are exploiting Frances welcome of asylum seekers, who can quickly qualify for health care and other benefits.

His government has accused some asylum seekers of engaging in what it describes as medical tourism by seeking treatment for serious medical conditions in French hospitals.

Mr. Macron said that reforms were necessary so that France shouldnt be too attractive a country for asylum seekers.

Last year, nearly 320,000 people without legal status benefited from a government health care program reserved for them a situation that has long angered Frances right.

Migrant rights groups said that tightening access to health care would harm most legitimate asylum seekers.

Many of them suffer from real mental and physical problems, given the very difficult journeys theyve had, said Bruno Morel, the director of Emmaus Solidarit, a migrant rights group. The government says if we welcome migrants too well, more will come. Thats totally false. That just feeds populism.

Mr. Macron has been criticized for representing the interests of Frances economic elite, especially during the Yellow Vest protests that roiled the country for months starting in October of last year.

In explaining his focus on immigration, Mr. Macron told members of his party, La Rpublique en Marche, that they must avoid becoming a party of the bourgeois. The bourgeois, he said, lived in areas with few immigrants and did not encounter immigration in their daily lives.

It is Frances working classes that live with the difficulties of immigration, he said, and have thus migrated to the far right.

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France Announces Tough New Measures on Immigration - The New York Times

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