logo
French-Algerian woman given 48 hours to leave France in incomprehensible deportation order

French-Algerian woman given 48 hours to leave France in incomprehensible deportation order

LeMondea day ago

Standing in the customs line at Charles-de-Gaulle Airport outside Paris around 9 am on June 2, Soraya (whose name has been changed at her request) was already thinking about reuniting with her parents a few hours later in Algiers, the city where she grew up and to which she frequently returns. But the 58-year-old woman, who holds both French and Algerian nationalities, was instead confronted with a very different scenario, culminating on the evening of June 2 with a deportation order and a one-year ban on returning to France.
She was not granted the usual voluntary departure period, generally set at 30 days, and was ordered to leave France within 48 hours. To justify the deportation order, the Paris Police Prefecture stated in the letter handed to Soraya – which Le Monde has seen – that she did not "prove effective and permanent residence in a dwelling designated as her primary home." Soraya has been living in France since 1993, obtained her certificate of French citizenship four years later, started a family there and has stable employment.
Contacted by Le Monde, the Police Prefecture did not respond. "They just tick boxes, repeating stereotyped phrases, even though their services have all the necessary information to verify the points they claim are problematic," criticized Samy Djemaoun, Soraya's lawyer. According to the prefecture, Soraya had "counterfeited, falsified, or issued under a different name a residence permit, or an identity or travel document."

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Russia targeted French speakers in Africa with AI-generated posts, says France
Russia targeted French speakers in Africa with AI-generated posts, says France

LeMonde

time4 hours ago

  • LeMonde

Russia targeted French speakers in Africa with AI-generated posts, says France

A clandestine pro-Russian online operation targeted French speakers in Africa with "deceptive" AI-generated posts in a campaign likely directed by Moscow, a French government agency said, in a report on Thursday, June 12. Moscow has sought to expand its influence in Africa in recent years, including in former French colonies, through campaigns using grassroots activists and social media. France's Viginum agency, which counters foreign disinformation campaigns, linked Moscow's "clandestine digital activities" to a Russian news agency openly operating in Africa, called African Initiative. With a Moscow address, African Initiative publishes in five languages, including English and French, and runs journalism courses and press trips in Africa. Viginum said the news agency appeared to have set up an operation, which it called "deceptive," posting AI-generated images, text and video and using "malign techniques" to boost views. The operation using pseudo-media outlets was "likely" run by a web marketing company subcontracted by African Initiative, the report said. Dozens of automated accounts also disseminated links to the sites on blogs, with posts appearing to be AI-generated and sometimes translated from Russian, Viginum said. The websites ran several thousand articles, largely on non-political topics such as cinema, sport and music, in an apparent bid to get linked to by other media, the report said. Despite the complex structure, the operation did not rack up many views and the sites appear to have been inactive since December, the French agency said. Replacing Wagner's information operations The Wagner group had previously played a key role in such operations, but Moscow has apparently moved to centralise control of information operations since the group was disbanded and reorganised following the death of its leader Yevgeny Prigozhin, in a 2023 plane crash. African Initiative has become "a key element in the restructuring and implementation of Russia's information and influence strategy in Africa" after Prigozhin's death, the Viginum report said. Its "activities are likely directed by the Russian state apparatus, particularly the Russian intelligence services," it said. Presented as an independent publication, its reporters include the former press secretary for Wagner's office in Saint Petersburg. Viginum released its findings after Meta in August 2024 said it had removed Facebook accounts targeting French-speaking African countries that promoted Russia's role in the region and criticized France. OpenAI, the company behind ChatGPT, later said it had banned accounts based in Russia from using its language models to generate images, comments and articles in English and French, which have been posted on sites posing as news media in Africa.

Why the UK and France are bringing Adolescence into classrooms
Why the UK and France are bringing Adolescence into classrooms

Euronews

time7 hours ago

  • Euronews

Why the UK and France are bringing Adolescence into classrooms

This week, the French government followed its UK counterpart by deciding to show schoolchildren 'Adolescence' - the gritty British crime drama about a 13-year-old accused of killing his classmate. The move comes in the wake of an alarming rise in violence in French schools as the scourge of knife crime spreads. There's also growing concern in both countries about the amount of time teenagers are spending on social media, in particular the sites being widely blamed for encouraging sexism and misogyny - and how that is affecting society and young people's behaviour. In this week's episode, we break down reactions to Adolescence and discuss other shows and films that have tackled the negative effects of social media. A group of artists have begun an experiment in the southern French countryside that could redefine the meaning of creative collaborations. The aim of the project is for researchers to study how the artists work without any links to the outside world, no natural light and no real-time information. Over the next two weeks, the members of Deep Time II will work dozens of metres underground in the Lombrives cave at Ussat-les- Bains to make diverse works. Unfinished projects must be completed outside within two months to be ready for an exhibition that's open to the public. It's the second such test of this type. Four years ago, a group of eight men and seven women volunteered to spend 40 days in confinement in a dark, damp and vast cave in the Pyrenees. They had no clocks, no sunlight and no contact with the world above. Scientists at the Human Adaption Institute leading the project say the experiment will help them better understand how people adapt to dramatic and drastic changes in the wake of the coronavirus pandemic. According to the organisers, our relationship with time has become one of the world's biggest concerns as many struggle with doomscrolling. We're faced with more devices and screens vying for our attention and offering us all non-stop content for our eyeballs and minds. More than 80 per cent of people believe that "time passes too quickly" and "that they don't have enough time". During the previous experiment, speaking from underground project director Christian Clot said: 'It's really interesting to observe how this group synchronizes themselves,' In partnership with labs in France and Switzerland, scientists monitored the 15-member group's sleep patterns, social interactions and behavioral reactions via sensors. One of the sensors was a tiny thermometer inside a capsule that participants swallowed like a pill. The capsules measured body temperature and transmitted data to a portable computer until they were expelled naturally. Although the participants looked visibly tired, two-thirds of them expressed a desire to remain underground a bit longer in order to finish group projects started during the expedition, Benoit Mauvieux, a chronobiologist involved in the research, told The Associated Press.

Two Jewish sisters' fight to honor the couple who hid them during the Holocaust
Two Jewish sisters' fight to honor the couple who hid them during the Holocaust

LeMonde

time8 hours ago

  • LeMonde

Two Jewish sisters' fight to honor the couple who hid them during the Holocaust

Arlette Testyler often says she was born twice. First in 1933, in Paris, a year after her sister Madeleine. The second time was in Vendôme, in 1942. Their parents, Polish Jews, had come to France to work and start a family, believing they would be safe far from the pogroms already ravaging their homeland. In 1941, their father, Abraham Reiman, who had enlisted in the French army two years earlier, was arrested by the police after being summoned for an identity check. In 1942, he was deported and murdered at Auschwitz. On July 16, Arlette, her sister and their mother were also arrested by the French police and held in inhumane conditions at the Vélodrome d'Hiver stadium in Paris during the mass round-up that led to the arrest of nearly 13,000 people. "It was Dante's inferno," she often says. They remained confined for three days before being transferred to the Beaune-la-Rolande camp, ahead of deportation to Poland. But, by a miracle unique to those tragic times, all three managed to escape and return to Paris before ending up in Vendôme, in central France, where many families had organized to hide Jewish children. It was there that Arlette and her sister found new life, hidden and saved, along with their mother. On Monday, June 16, the town will host a most unusual ceremony. Jeanne and Jean Philippeau, born in 1913 and 1910 and who died in 1992 and 1993, will be honored by the State of Israel. Both will receive the highly prestigious title of Righteous Among the Nations, awarded by the Yad Vashem Institute in Jerusalem and the Supreme Court of Israel. The couple will be honored for saving the lives of the two girls as well as a boy, Simon Windland, now dead, "without any personal gain," as specified by the French Committee for Yad Vashem – a prerequisite for the award.

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