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Factcheck: Do foreigners in France really risk deportation for holding pro-Palestine views?

American social media influencers and magazines have implied that foreigners in France risk penalties or even deportation for voicing support for Palestine.

Factcheck: Do foreigners in France really risk deportation for holding pro-Palestine views?
A man stands on a pedestal wearing a shirt reading "Palestine will live" during a 2021 demonstration in France (Photo by GEOFFROY VAN DER HASSELT / AFP)

On Thursday, American influencer, Amanda Rollins – known as ‘Americanfille’ on TikTok – shared a video explaining to her followers why she could not make any public statements regarding her personal feelings related to the situation in Israel and Palestine.

She said that: “The vibes are so off in France . . that they have come out and said that if they find a foreigner at a protest, it is immediate deportation”.

@americanfille Replying to @Jessica Christie ♬ original sound – Amanda Rollins

As of Wednesday, French media reported that at least 4,500 people have died – and many more have been injured – in the Hamas attack on Israeli civilians and Israel’s subsequent bombing of Gaza.

The American political magazine, Jacobin, also ran an article with the headline: “Emmanuel Macron’s Government Has Banned Solidarity With Palestine”.

Rollins – who previously went viral with a post explaining how, in Europe, people put butter on sandwiches, did not explain who exactly had said that any foreigner at a protest would be deportation, but the implication is that it was a government source.

Protests

Following Hamas’ attack on Israel on October 7th, the country banned pro-Palestinian protests, citing security concerns.

French President Emmanuel Macron defended the bans, saying: “I think there was a period of decency — there had been a terrorist attack, it wasn’t good,” in an exchange with students in the street witnessed by AFP.

“I see people who want to demonstrate peacefully but there are hyper-radical elements who are going to burn the Israeli flag and defend Hamas,” Macron added.

The ban remained in place for weeks, until an authorised demo in Paris on Sunday, October 22nd, which was attended by around 15,000 people.

Some pro-Palestine protests had previously gone ahead without authorisation, and there have been arrests at those. 

Deportation 

So can foreigners truly be “instantly deported” if found at a protest, especially an unauthorised one?

Certainly no-one in government or any other position of authority has said this, so we’re not sure what Rollins is referring to in her video.

There have, however, been calls for the expulsion of radicalised foreigners, namely from the country’s interior minister, Gérald Darmanin, who claims to have a list of 200 radicalised foreigners he wants to expel from the country. The interior minister was generally referring to people who are fiché S – on a terror watchlist – because of extremist views or because they have regularly taken part in violent protests.

Foreigners can be expelled from the country, in certain circumstances, if they have committed a crime.

Darmanin told Le Monde that: “the perpetrators of anti-Semitic acts who are not of French nationality and whatever [their] status will have their residency permits immediately withdrawn.”

As of Saturday, Darmanin said that “two or three people” have been expelled from France – Le Monde reported that one case concerned a person who had been arrested after driving around a synagogue in Cannes with a tear gas canister in the trunk, while the other concerned a man in Paris who had behaved in a suspicious manner in front of a school-synagogue. Le Monde reported that the man made a reference to bombs and said “Allah akbar!” before being arrested.

Darmanin also on Thursday tweeted that “a foreign individual making anti-Semitic threats was arrested on October 7th. Following my instructions, he was expelled from the national territory today.”

In her video, Rollins, who added that she is requesting French nationality, said: “I can’t say a peep about it. I cannot risk deportation.”

The TikToker also referenced the case of the French footballer  “Kareema Benzina” whom a French Senator has called to be stripped of his citizenship after right-wing politicians alleged that he has connections to the group the Muslim Brotherhood. Karim Benzema has announced that he will take legal action against the politicians concerned.

READ MORE: Explained: The French footballer’s legal battle with right-wing politicians

According to experts, even if the accusations are confirmed, it would be extremely unlikely – if not impossible – for the 35-year-old to be stripped of his French nationality. Born in Lyon and boasting more than 100 caps for the French national team, Benzema is a French national with parents of Algerian descent.

What about the right to protest?

When it comes to the right to protest, France recognises this as a ‘fundamental freedom’ in the Declaration of the Rights of Man and Citizens. As for freedom of speech, France considers any “incitement to hatred, violence or discrimination to treat certain people badly because of their origin, religion, gender or sexual orientation” as a criminal offence.

According to French government website, Vie-Publique, demonstrations and protests must, however, be declared “to prevent public order disturbances.”

Taking part in an ‘undeclared protest’ can lead to possible penalties, like a fine for failing to leave after calls from police to disperse, but attending an undeclared demonstration is not in itself a criminal offense.

French penal code states that the maximum penalty for organising an undeclared (or banned) demonstration is six months in prison and a fine of up to €7,500 fine. 

Would attending a protest put your residency permit or citizenship application at risk?

Rollins says that she cannot say anything because she is going through the process to apply for French citizenship.

So would attending a protest put your citizenship application – or visa or residency permit – at risk?

It is important to note the difference between the terms ‘expulsion’ and ‘deportation’ in French law. Deportation is usually connected to an OQTF order – an Obligation de quitter le territoire français, which means ‘an obligation to leave France’.

This can be served on any foreigner who is in French territory and has either committed a serious crime or has committed an immigration offence such as overstaying a visa.

According to the Interior Minister, 120,000 of these were served in 2020.

This is not the same as expulsion – foreigners expelled from France must leave the country immediately, those served with an OQTF are given a deadline to leave – usually within 30 days of receiving the notice.

READ MORE: OQTF – What is the ‘notice to quit France’ and can you appeal against it?

Expulsion, on the other hand, is reserved for people who are living in France illegally and who represent some sort of threat to the French state – it’s usually used for terror suspects.

Criminal convictions can result in your application to renew your residency card being turned down, but this is uaually only the case if you have been convicted for a serious crime. You need to have been convicted of an offence in court, not merely arrested, for this to apply.

READ ALSO: What offences can lose you the right to live in France?

Between October 2020 and June 2021 8,031 carte de séjour renewals were refused on the grounds of criminality – of these 27 percent were for the most serious types of offence including assault, attempted murder, organised fraud and making threats to a public official, 5.9 percent were for driving offences – the official data does not specify the type of offence – 6.3 percent were following a domestic violence conviction and 7 percent were around offences of begging or soliciting.

As for your citizenship request, you you will have to prove that you have not been convicted of a crime in France, by providing your extrait de casier judiciaire

Depending on your criteria for citizenship, you may also need to demonstrate a clean record going back a maximum of 10 years (both in France and any countries you have lived in). 

READ MORE: Reader question: Will a criminal record stop you getting French citizenship?

Being turned down for citizenship does not mean that you cannot continue to live in France. 

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JOHN LICHFIELD

OPINION: Macron’s attempts to tame world leaders shows he’s more a thinker than a diplomat

French President Emmanuel Macron's flawed efforts to charm the world's autocratic and populist leaders have previously ended in failure or even humiliation. Taking the Chinese president to the Pyrenees won't change that record, writes John Lichfield.

OPINION: Macron's attempts to tame world leaders shows he's more a thinker than a diplomat

Emmanuel Macron used to fancy himself as a lion-tamer.

There wasn’t a murderous dictator or mendacious populist that the French President would not try to charm: Vladimir Putin, Donald Trump, Boris Johnson, Narendra Modi, Recep Tayip Erdogan, Victor Orban.

The results, overall, have been poor. Sometimes Macron has been eaten, diplomatically-speaking. Years of trying to smooth-talk Vladimir Putin – with invitations to Versailles and the presidential retreat at Fort Brégancon and the long-table talks in the Kremlin – ended in disillusion and humiliation.

Macron’s attempts to create a blokeish friendship with Boris Johnson ended in cross-Channel exchanges of insults and accusations. His mission to find a core, reasonable Donald Trump ended in the discovery that there was no reasonable Donald Trump, just a self-obsessed, shallow deal-maker or deal-breaker.

And now President Xi Jinping of China. The two presidents and their wives are on an away-day to the French Pyrenees (Tuesday), visiting a region dear to Macron since his childhood.

The first day of Xi’s French state visit in Paris yesterday seems to have produced very little. The Chinese president promised to send no arms to Russia but that is a long-standing promise that he has, technically-speaking, kept.

Xi is reported to have promised to restrict sales to Moscow of “secondary materials” which can be used to make arms. We will see.

The Chinese leader also agreed to support Macron’s call for an “Olympic truce” in Ukraine and elsewhere for the duration of the Paris games in late July and August. Good luck with that.

On the gathering menace of a trade war between the EU and China, no progress was made. As a minimal concession to his French hosts, Xi promised to drop threatened dumping duties on French Cognac and Armagnac sales to China.

Otherwise, Xi said that he could not see a problem. Cheap Chinese-built electric cars and solar panels and steel are swamping the EU market? All the better for the European fight against inflation and global warming.

READ MORE: How ‘Battery Valley’ is changing northern France

Maybe more will be achieved in shirt-sleeves in the Pyrenees today. The Chinese leadership is said to approve of Macron or at least believe that he is useful to them.

Beijing likes the French President’s arguments, renewed in a speech last month, that the EU should become a “strategic” commercial and military power in its own right and not a “vassal” of the United States. The Chinese leadership evidently has no fear of the EU becoming a rival power. It sees Macron’s ideas for a “Europe puissance” as a useful way of dividing the West and weakening the strength of Washington, the dollar and “western values”.

Macron has sometimes encouraged this way of thinking, perhaps accidentally. After his state visit to China last year, he gave a rambling media interview in which he seemed to say that the EU had no interest in being “followers of the US” or defending Taiwan from Chinese aggression. He had to amend his words later.

That was Macron at his worst, an ad-lib, stand-up diplomat who ignores advice from the professionals in the Quai d’Orsay. I would argue, however, that the wider Macron argument – the EU must become more powerful or die – is the French President at his best.

Few other politicians in the world think ahead so much as Macron does. Democratic politics is mired in short-termism. Only autocrats like Xi or Putin can afford to think in terms of decades or centuries.

Macron likes to look around corners. He is often a better thinker than he is a diplomat or practical, daily politician.

His core argument – made in his Sorbonne speech last month and an interview with The Economist – is that Europe faces an unprecedented triple threat to its values, its security and its future prosperity.  

The rise of intolerant populist-nationalism threatens the values and institutions implanted in Europe after World War Two. The aggression of Russia and the detachment of the US (not just Donald Trump) threatens Europe’s security. The abandonment of global rules on fair trade – by Joe Biden’s US as well as Xi’s China – threatens to destroy European industry and sources of prosperity.

READ MORE: OPINION – Macron must earn the role of ’21st-century Churchill’

Civilisations, like people, are mortal, Macron says. Unless the EU and the wider democratic Europe (yes, you post-Brexit Britain) address these problems there is a danger that European civilisation (not just the EU experiment) could die.

Exaggerated? Maybe. But the problems are all real. Macron’s solutions are a powerful European defence alliance within Nato and targeted European protectionism and investment for the industries of the future.

The chances of those things being agreed by in time to make a difference are non-existent to small. In France, as elsewhere, these big “strategic” questions scarcely figure in popular concerns in the European election campaign.

Emmanuel Macron has now been president for seven years. His remaining three years in office will be something between disjointed and paralysed.

It is too early to write his political obituary but the Xi visit and the Sorbonne speech offer the likely main components. Macron will, I fear, be remembered as a visionary thinker and flawed diplomat/politician.

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