French lawmaker suggests deporting migrants to remote islands
2025-04-10
PARIS: A senior figure in France`s main right-wing party has sparked outrage in France by suggesting `dangerous` foreigners who refuse to leave the country should be sent instead to wind-swept French islands off Canada in the north Atlantic.
French politics have shifted to the right in recent months, with the government increasingly picking up farright talking points such as security and immigration.
Algeria has refused to take back nationals France has ordered to leave, including a 37-year-old man who went on a stabbing rampage in the French city of Mulhouse in February, killing one person.
`I suggest dangerous foreigners under order to leave French territory be locked up in a detention centre in Saint Pierre and Miquelon,` Laurent Wauquiez, the parliamentary leader for the right-wing Republicans (LR) party, said on Tuesday.
`They would have a choice: either go to Saint Pierre and Miquelon or return home,` he told right-wing website JDnews. Saint Pierre and Miquelon, an archipelago of eight islands located just off the Canadian island of Newfoundland, has a population of less than 6,000 people.
It is one of several French overseas territories that span the globe.
Wauquiez, who is vying for the presidency of the LR party against popular Interior Minister Bruno Retailleau, said he hoped the island`s climate would have a `deterrent effect`.
`The average yearly temperature is five degrees (Celsius, 41 Fahrenheit), there are 146 days of rain and snow. I think that quite rapidly, it will make everyone think,` he told CNews television broadcaster.
Under French law, a prefect a local representative of the state can order a foreigner who does not have a residency permit or has newly arrived and is deemed a danger to public order to leave the country.-AFP