logo
From France to Mali, a deportee's struggle far from home

From France to Mali, a deportee's struggle far from home

Japan Times10-04-2025

In December, Moussa Sacko spent his birthday in Mali scrolling through messages from friends with whom he celebrated a year earlier on Paris' Champs-Elysees. He hasn't seen any of them since being deported from France in July.
Like Sacko, hundreds of foreign nationals previously protected because they grew up in France now face expulsion under legislation introduced last year.
Sacko was born in Mali but moved to France as a young child to treat a chronic eye condition. He spent most of his life in Montreuil, a Paris suburb.
"I don't feel at home," Sacko said in Bamako, the capital of Mali, which has a rich culture and history but is one of the poorest countries in the world. It is in the grips of a jihadi insurgency. Military coups in 2020 and 2021 led to sanctions, tanking the economy.
He shares a room with a cousin, on an unpaved street near open sewers, and stands out from the way he dresses and speaks French. He says he often feels lonely: "I am on the outside, in a bubble between Europe and Africa."
Reuters interviewed more than 40 people including five individuals affected by the new law, along with rights advocates, lawyers and researchers, for a detailed look at the impact of France's 2024 immigration reform.
In total, 12 cases were reviewed of people deported or facing deportation under the new rules, mostly for crimes for which they served sentences long ago, in what their lawyers called overzealous enforcement that upturned lives.
The lower bar has raised concerns, including in French court decisions, that the rules clash with the European Convention on Human Rights' Article 8 on the right to private and family life.
The French Interior Ministry did not reply to requests for comment. After presenting the bill to parliament, then-Interior Minister Gerald Darmanin said it was about "what type of immigration we wish to have," including making it easier to deport undocumented immigrants who commit crimes.
Polls show public support for the law.
France's Constitutional Council rejected elements of the legislation last year, including migration quotas, but the new deportation rules remained, removing previous protections for foreign nationals who settled in France before the age of 13 and those with French children, a French spouse, or a serious medical condition.
Sacko cuts a cake as he celebrates his birthday with his extended family in Bamako, months after his deportation from France. |
Reuters
The cases that were reviewed involved people deported or threatened with deportation to countries including Mali, Algeria, Morocco and Ivory Coast. Eight settled in France before they were 13. Three have French children, and one has a French spouse.
In two of the cases, judges overturned the deportation orders citing Article 8. In one of those cases, the deportation order was struck down after the man had already been expelled.
The government said all the individuals were a threat to public order, an elastic legal category 12 lawyers said was previously reserved for hardened criminals but was now invoked more regularly.
"Before, this threat would be terrorism or serious banditry and little by little it has become petty crime," said immigration lawyer Morgane Belotti.
In four of the cases, authorities issued deportation orders without prior warning when the individuals turned up for immigration appointments, without being accused of new infractions, a practice that makes once-routine visits fraught.
"Fewer people are going to risk asking for a residency permit due to fears that it could end in a deportation procedure," said Melanie Louis, of French rights group La Cimade. The group says deporting someone because of crimes they already received punishment for is a "double sentence."
Deportations rose 27% in 2024 to 22,000, government data shows.
La Cimade tracked 341 deportation orders issued last year as a result of the law. The ministry said it did not have data on the law's impact on people who settled in France as children.
The group said it supported 191 individuals last year at the Mesnil-Amelot detention center, near Charles de Gaulle airport, who would have previously been protected.
Of those, 35 were deported, and 24 released due to courts overturning deportation orders, it said.
Sacko at a window of an old fast food store that he bought to turn into a household goods store in Bamako |
Reuters
European governments have expressed frustration with courts using Article 8 to block deportations. British Home Secretary Yvette Cooper in March announced a review of immigration courts' use of the article. Gerrie Lodder, migration law professor at the Open University of the Netherlands, described a trend to dilute Article 8 provisions, with people settled as long as 50 years being deported.
The European Union is looking at establishing common rules to expedite deportations, including sending rejected asylum-seekers to third countries.
"The aim is to make the process of returns simpler," while respecting fundamental rights, a European Commission spokesperson said.
Across Europe, deportations of non-EU citizens rose by a quarter in 2023, at 91,000, led by France and Germany, according to statistics agency Eurostat.
Advocacy groups and lawyers say France's rules have put individuals at risk in unsafe or unstable countries, separated from family and without adequate health care.
Sacko's eye condition, nystagmus, causes rapid pupil movements. He saved enough with crowdfunded donations from French friends to buy a motorbike and a small kiosk to sell basic household goods.
Sacko said riding the bike lifts his spirits. He has no funds yet to stock the kiosk, he said.
"It is very complicated to make a living," he said, his eyes jittery.
A police officer speaks with migrants in the corridor of a detention center, where migrants are sent to await deportation, in Mesnil-Amelot near Paris, in November. |
Reuters
Activist Alassane Dicko, deported to Mali in 2006, helps other returnees. He said some were too ashamed to contact their Malian family for help. Homelessness and mental health issues such as depression were not uncommon, he said.
In November, a court overturned the deportation order against Algerian national Hocine, 34, citing Article 8.
But Hocine, who asked to only use his first name, had been deported to Algeria three months earlier. He is still there.
The order cited past offenses. Hocine served around six years during spells in prison prior to 2020 for crimes including drug dealing and handling stolen goods. He says he did "stupid things" as a youth but had changed.
Hocine worked as a cleaner and lived with his partner in the Parisian suburb of Nanterre, where he settled with family when he was 3 years old. He and his partner were trying to have a baby, medical records show.
On Aug. 1, Hocine attended what he thought was a routine appointment to renew residency papers. Instead he was handed a deportation order. Three weeks later police arrested him at his home. On Sept. 4, he was flown to Algiers.
"I'm on the flight bb I can't call my love I love you very much," he texted his partner from the runway.
A girl prepares to pour water from a well in a courtyard at the home of Sacko's relatives in Bamako. |
Reuters
Hocine's story was verified through case documents and interviews with him and court officials.
Despite the November decision, which approved a family residency permit, the French consulate in Algiers refused him a visa.
Hocine is now living with relatives, unable to speak Arabic, and waiting for the court to notify the consulate of a subsequent ruling in his favor.
"If this doesn't work, I'm going to do like everyone else and cross the sea," he said, referring to the dangerous irregular route across the Mediterranean.
The consulate did not reply to comment requests. The Hauts-de-Seine prefecture responsible for his permit acknowledged Hocine's deportation order had been overruled.
After a turbulent upbringing, last year Sacko was in a steady relationship and volunteering most days at a community association in Montreuil named En Gare.
He helped with food distribution, events and counseling. He made friends there, who on his birthday took him to the Champs-Elysees.
In 2022, before the new law, a court overturned an attempt to deport Sacko after a 12-month sentence for selling marijuana, on grounds he settled in France as a child.
The ruling said Sacko was entitled to temporary residency, but the local prefecture rejected two applications, he said. The prefecture did not respond to a request for comment.
Then, in May, police arrested Sacko during a raid on a building En Gare used as an operations center and squat for people in need. Sacko was on overnight duty as a supervisor. In the raid, he lost his glasses, adjusted for his condition.
A deportation order was issued, saying the drug convictions made him a "real, current and serious enough threat," surpassing personal ties to France.
"Right when he was finding his feet, he was put right back in a really tough spot," said Moussa's friend, social worker Assia Belhadi, who co-founded En Gare.
After the arrest, Sacko was sent to Mesnil-Amelot. On July 2, he was escorted onto a flight to Bamako.
Sacko drives his motorbike in Bamako. Sacko says his days feel long, with no job to go to. |
Reuters
He is banned for two years from applying for a French visa. Compared to Montreuil, Bamako feels like a different planet, said Sacko.
The air is hot and sandy. Chickens strut outside. There are no pedestrian crossings and no drizzly mornings, he said.
Sacko said days feel long, with no job to go to. He fears he won't see his ailing grandmother again. His relationship has ended.
His eye condition has been untreated for months, and he has no replacement glasses, giving him migraines and blurred vision. For his birthday he bought himself a cake, to eat with relatives.
On a January evening, Belhadi and other friends rang, asking if Sacko had good news.
"For now I am waiting,' Sacko said.
"Then we are waiting with you," Belhadi replied.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Americans hold mass protests ahead of Trump's military parade
Americans hold mass protests ahead of Trump's military parade

Nikkei Asia

time2 hours ago

  • Nikkei Asia

Americans hold mass protests ahead of Trump's military parade

WASHINGTON/LOS ANGELES/NEW YORK (Reuters) -- Tens of thousands of Americans protested President Donald Trump at rallies and marches in major cities from New York to Los Angeles on Saturday, a day marred by the assassination of a Democratic lawmaker in Minnesota and conflict in the Middle East. The protests marked the largest outpouring of opposition to Trump's presidency since he returned to power in January, and came the same day that thousands of military personnel, vehicles and aircraft will march through and fly over Washington, in a parade celebrating the U.S. Army's 250th anniversary.

Police hunt suspect in deadly shooting of Democratic Minnesota state lawmakers
Police hunt suspect in deadly shooting of Democratic Minnesota state lawmakers

Japan Today

time3 hours ago

  • Japan Today

Police hunt suspect in deadly shooting of Democratic Minnesota state lawmakers

Officers are posted in a staging area after what police said was a targeted shooting in the area around Edinburgh Golf Course in the Minneapolis suburb of Brooklyn Park, Minnesota, U.S. June 14, 2025. REUTERS/Ellen Schmidt By Jonathan Landay A gunman posing as a police officer killed a senior Democratic state assemblywoman and her husband on Saturday in an apparent "politically motivated assassination," and wounded a second lawmaker and his spouse, said Minnesota Governor Tim Walz and law enforcement officials. A major search backed by the FBI was underway for the suspect, who fled on foot after firing at police and abandoning a vehicle in which officers found a "manifesto" and a list of other legislators and officials, law enforcement officials said. The list had about 70 names, reported CNN law enforcement analyst John Miller, a former head of FBI public affairs and former chief of intelligence and counterterrorism for the New York Police Department, citing law enforcement sources. They included abortion providers, pro-abortion rights advocates, and lawmakers in Minnesota and other states, he said. ABC News, also citing law enforcement officials, said the list included dozens of Minnesota Democrats including Walz, U.S. Representative Ilhan Omar, Senator Tina Smith and Minnesota Attorney General Keith Ellison. The killings of Melissa Hortman, a former assembly speaker and her husband, Mark, prompted reactions of shock and horror from Republican and Democratic politicians across the country and calls for dialing back increasingly divisive political rhetoric. The shootings come on the heels of a heated hearing in Congress on Thursday in which Walz and two other Democratic governors defended their states' policies to maintain sanctuary for undocumented immigrants, drawing attacks from Republicans who support Trump's aggressive immigration crackdown. Investigators have identified the suspected shooter and believe that he is within 3 miles (5 km) of the shooting site because he fled on foot, a person familiar with the matter said. The person added that the FBI and state law enforcement aircraft are on standby to join in the search for the shooter. "There's no doubt he's gonna be caught, the scariest thing is what happens when he gets cornered," the person said. "Not only to himself, but to anybody else in the place he's hiding and of course the law-enforcement professionals that have to deal with him." Minnesota State Patrol chief Col. Christina Bogojevic told reporters that police found flyers in the suspect's vehicle with "No Kings" printed on them, but said police had no direct links to the nationwide "No Kings" protests against President Donald Trump's policies taking place on Saturday. The organizing No Kings Coalition announced they canceled all protests in Minnesota given a shelter-in-place order and that the suspect was still at large and impersonating a police officer. Trump said he was briefed on the "terrible shooting that took place in Minnesota, which appears to be a targeted attack against State Lawmakers." "Such horrific violence will not be tolerated in the United States of America. God Bless the great people of Minnesota, a truly great place!" Trump said in a statement. POLICE IMPERSONATOR Hortman and her husband were shot dead in their home in the Minneapolis suburb of Brooklyn Park, Walz said. The Minneapolis suburb is located in the northern part of Hennepin County, a Democratic stronghold. Hortman's official website says she and her husband have two children. Walz said that the gunman went to the Hortmans' residence after shooting Senator John Hoffman and his wife multiple times in their home in the nearby town of Champlin. They underwent surgery, Walz said, adding that he was "cautiously optimistic" that they would survive "this assassination attempt." "This was an act of targeted political violence," he said. "Peaceful discourse is the foundation of our democracy. We don't settle our differences with violence or at gunpoint." Law enforcement officials said the gunman attacked the Hoffmans at around 2 a.m. CDT (0700 GMT) and then drove about five miles to the Hortmans' residence. Brooklyn Park Police Chief Mark Bruley said that a "very intuitive" police sergeant who responded to the Hoffman attack asked colleagues to "proactively" check the Hortmans' residence. The two officers arriving at the Hortmans' residence saw what appeared to be a police vehicle parked in the driveway with its emergency lights on and an individual dressed and equipped as a police officer leaving the home, he said. The suspect "immediately fired upon the officers, who exchanged gunfire and the suspect retreated back into the home," Bruley continued. The suspect, who was wearing a vest with a taser, other police equipment and a badge, is believed to have fled from the rear of the home, he said. The Hortmans and Hoffmans were on the list of names found in the suspect's car, officials said. POLITICAL VIOLENCE SURGE The pre-dawn Minnesota killings come amid a surge in U.S. political attacks in recent years, underscoring the dark side of the nation's deepening political divisions. These include the attempted 2020 kidnapping of Michigan Governor Gretchen Whitmer, a Democrat, and a man who broke into Democratic Pennsylvania Governor Josh Shapiro's residence in April and set it on fire. In July last year, then-candidate Trump escaped an assassination attempt by a gunman while speaking at a campaign rally in Pennsylvania. On Saturday, the Texas Department of Public Safety said in a statement that it identified a "credible threat toward state lawmakers planning to attend a protest later today," in Austin and ordered an evacuation of the state capitol and its grounds. It was not immediately clear if there was any link to Minnesota. Trump has faced criticism from some opponents over his handling of incidents involving political violence. In one of his first moves in office earlier this year, Trump pardoned nearly everyone criminally charged with participating in the January 6, 2021, Capitol attack, a move critics said signaled support for the rioters. "The incendiary rhetoric, hate, and violence must stop," Republican Representative Dan Meuser of Pennsylvania said on X, calling it a "tragic, ruthless, cold-blooded shooting of innocent public servants in Minnesota." House of Representatives Democratic leader Hakeem Jeffries called for elected officials to "conduct themselves responsibly" and said he asked the House Sergeant at Arms and The U.S. Capitol Police to ensure the safety of Minnesota's delegation and other members of Congress. The bipartisan Minnesota delegation released a joint statement saying "Today we speak with one voice to express our outrage, grief, and condemnation of this horrible attack on public servants. There is no place in our democracy for politically-motivated violence." © Thomson Reuters 2025.

Israel says attacks on Iran are nothing compared with what is coming
Israel says attacks on Iran are nothing compared with what is coming

Japan Today

time3 hours ago

  • Japan Today

Israel says attacks on Iran are nothing compared with what is coming

A woman uses her phone at an impact site following missile attack from Iran on Israel, in Rishon LeZion, Israel, June 14, 2025. REUTERS/Ammar Awad By Maayan Lubell and Parisa Hafezi Israel pounded Iran for a second day on Saturday and Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said its campaign would intensify, while Tehran called off nuclear talks that Washington had held out as the only way to halt the bombing. A day after Israel wiped out the top echelon of Iran's military command with a surprise attack on its old foe, it appeared to have hit Iran's oil and gas industry for the first time, with Iranian state media reporting a blaze at a gas field. Netanyahu said Israel's strikes had set back Iran's nuclear programme possibly by years and rejected international calls for restraint. "We will hit every site and every target of the Ayatollahs' regime, and what they have felt so far is nothing compared with what they will be handed in the coming days," he said in a video message. In Tehran, Iranian authorities said around 60 people, including 29 children, were killed in an attack on a housing complex, with more strikes reported across the country. Israel said it had attacked more than 150 targets. Iran had launched its own retaliatory missile volley on Friday night, killing at least three people in Israel. Air raid sirens sent Israelis into shelters as waves of missiles streaked across the sky and interceptors rose to meet them. U.S. President Donald Trump has lauded Israel's strikes and warned Iran of much worse to come. He said it was not too late to halt the Israeli campaign, but only if Tehran quickly accepted a sharp downgrading of its nuclear program at talks with Washington which had been scheduled for Sunday. Host Oman confirmed on Saturday that the next round of talks had been scrapped. Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araqchi said holding talks was unjustifiable while Israel's "barbarous" attacks were ongoing. In the first apparent attack to hit Iran's energy infrastructure, Iranian media reported a fire on Saturday after Israel bombed the South Pars gas field in southern Bushehr province. The semi-official Tasnim news agency said some gas production there was suspended following the attack. Worries about potential disruption to the region's oil exports had already boosted the price of crude by about 7% on Friday, even though Israel had spared Iran's oil and gas industry on the campaign's first day. An Iranian general, Esmail Kosari, said Tehran was reviewing whether to close the Strait of Hormuz controlling access to the Gulf for tankers. With Israel saying its operation could last weeks, and urging Iran's people to rise up against their Islamic clerical rulers, fears have grown of a regional conflagration dragging in outside powers. "If (Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali) Khamenei continues to fire missiles at the Israeli home front, Tehran will burn," Israeli Defense Minister Israel Katz said. Tehran warned Israel's allies that their military bases in the region would come under fire too if they helped shoot down Iranian missiles. However, 20 months of war in Gaza and a conflict in Lebanon last year have decimated Tehran's strongest regional proxies, Hamas in Gaza and Hezbollah in Lebanon, reducing its options for retaliation. Trump and Russian President Vladimir Putin spoke for 50 minutes on Saturday, the Kremlin said, with Putin condemning Israel's operation and Trump describing events in the Middle East as "very alarming". But both leaders said they do not rule out a return to negotiations on Iran's nuclear program. NIGHT OF BLASTS AND FEAR IN ISRAEL AND IRAN Iran's overnight fusillade included hundreds of ballistic missiles and drones, an Israeli official said. At least three people were reported killed and 174 injured, mostly lightly, in 17 strikes, including on Tel Aviv, that evaded interceptors. In Tel Aviv, uncertainty lingered on Saturday over the possibility of another Iranian barrage after air raid sirens sent residents across the country rushing into shelters overnight as missiles and interceptors streaked across the sky. Israeli-Canadian Jordan Falkenstein, 39, said he spent the previous night in his building's shelter with all his neighbors. "You can see that people have a sense of precaution this weekend. We're not sure. We're still trying to anticipate what will happen this evening. It's better to play it safe," he said. Israeli military spokesperson Brigadier General Effie Defrin cautioned as night fell on Saturday that Iranian attacks were not over, urging the public to follow public safety guidelines. In Iran, Israel's two days of strikes destroyed residential apartment buildings, killing families and neighbours as apparent collateral damage in strikes targeting scientists and senior officials in their beds. Iran said 78 people were killed on the first day and scores more on the second, including 60 when a missile brought down a 14-storey apartment block in Tehran, where 29 of the dead were children. State TV broadcast pictures of a building flattened into debris and the facade of several upper storeys lying sideways in the street, while slabs of concrete dangled from a neighboring building. "Smoke and dust were filling all the house and we couldn't breathe," 45-year-old Tehran resident Mohsen Salehi told Iranian news agency WANA after an overnight air strike woke his family. Israel sees Iran's nuclear program as a threat to its existence, and said the bombardment was designed to avert the last steps to production of a nuclear weapon. A military official on Saturday said Israel had caused significant damage to Iran's nuclear facilities at Natanz and Isfahan, but had not so far taken on another uranium enrichment site, Fordow, dug into a mountain. The official said Israel had "eliminated the highest commanders of their military leadership" and had killed nine nuclear scientists who were "main sources of knowledge, main forces driving forward the (nuclear) programme". Tehran insists the programme is entirely civilian and that it does not seek an atomic bomb. However the U.N. nuclear watchdog reported it this week as violating obligations under the global non-proliferation treaty. © Thomson Reuters 2025.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store