Deadly
knife attack reignites France’s politically charged immigration debate
How the
government responds to Saturday’s tragedy will have domestic and geopolitical
ramifications.
February 26,
2025 4:01 am CET
By Victor
Goury-Laffont
https://www.politico.eu/article/mulhouse-knife-attack-terrorism-france-immigration-debate-algeria/
PARIS —
French Prime Minister François Bayrou will hold an emergency meeting Wednesday
to draw up a response to a deadly weekend knife attack in the Alsatian city of
Mulhouse.
The alleged
perpetrator of the incident is a 37-year-old Algerian citizen, a French
Interior Ministry representative said. Interior Minister Bruno Retailleau said
the suspect had a “schizophrenic profile” and had previously been expelled from
France — but was subsequently barred from entering Algeria by local
authorities.
“The
Mulhouse assassin had been presented 10 times to the Algerian authorities so
that his country of origin would accept that we send him back home,” Bayrou
told reporters on Monday during a visit to the Paris International Agricultural
Show. “It’s unacceptable.”
The attack,
which President Emmanuel Macron described as an act of Islamist terrorism, has
reignited debate in France on whether to rein in immigration amid a Europe-wide
shift to the right. How the government responds will likely affect its
increasingly strained relationship with Algeria, a former colony, and could
have political ramifications for Bayrou and the increasingly popular
Retailleau, who is vying for the lead of his conservative party, Les
Républicains.
Within hours
of the attack, Retailleau pinned the incident on what he called France’s
insufficiently tough immigration laws, which lawmakers strengthened in late
2023.
“We need to
change the rules. Enough is enough,” Retailleau said as he arrived in Mulhouse
Saturday evening.
The attack,
which President Emmanuel Macron described as an act of Islamist terrorism, has
reignited debate in France on whether to rein in immigration amid a Europe-wide
shift to the right. | Sebastien Bozon/AFP via Getty Images
While
official figures show no spike in documented migration, Retailleau’s hardline
position has been well received. His approval rating now makes him the most
popular member of the government, according to a recent survey of 1,005 French
voters conducted by polling institute Odoxa.
Perhaps
because of this, the interior minister’s stance on immigration has been backed
by key members of Macron’s centrist camp and by high-ranking government
officials — including the prime minister. Bayrou even took fire from the left
last month for claiming it felt like parts of France were being “flooded” with
migrants.
The shift in
attitude toward migration isn’t limited to France. Across the border in
Germany, incoming conservative Chancellor Friedrich Merz has vowed to close the
country’s borders to asylum seekers after an Afghan man was accused in January
of attacking a group of preschoolers in a park, stabbing to death a 2-year-old
boy and a man attempting to protect the children.
Merz’s
victory on Sunday, and the historic performance of the far-right Alternative
for Germany, were seen as both a vindication of his strategy and confirmation
of Europe’s increasingly anti-immigrant tilt.
The
repatriation issue
Many French
ministers have been reticent to publicly discuss policy specifics ahead of
Wednesday’s meeting, although government spokesperson Sophie Primas told RTL on
Monday that authorities may consider limiting the number of visas granted to
Algerian nationals. Primas added that Bayrou’s government is also considering
increasing the length of time authorities can detain undocumented migrants to
allow for more time to negotiate repatriations.
Foreign
Affairs Minister Jean-Noël Barrot said Wednesday ahead of the meeting that he
would propose European-wide visa restrictions for countries who refuse to
cooperate with French immigration authorities. He also proposed to reduce
tariffs for countries more willing to cooperate.
A report
from the French Court of Auditors estimated that only about 10 percent of
expulsion measures had resulted in individuals actually leaving France.
“When you
deliver an order to leave French territory, you need the country where the
person is being deported to issue a consular pass,” said Charly Salkazanov, a
lawyer specializing in immigration law. Salkazanov said the astonishingly low
repatriation rate was due in part to the shaky legal justification for some
deportation orders and the fraught diplomatic relations between France and many
of the countries where it seeks to deport undocumented people.
Paris and
Algiers have had a rocky relationship since the North African country gained
independence from its former colonizer in 1962 after years of bloodshed. Ties
have become increasingly strained in recent years over who has sovereignty over
Western Sahara; over Algeria’s detention of French-Algerian author Boulam
Sansal; and due to a dispute over Algerian influencers accused of attempting to
incite violence in France or against members of the Algerian opposition.
Retailleau
has launched his own public crusade against the Algerian authorities, accusing
them in January of seeking to “humiliate” France by refusing to accept an
Algerian national expelled from French territory. The individual was detained
for sharing videos on TikTok urging his followers to harm a critic of the
Algerian regime. A series of Algerian nationalist content creators have since
been arrested and are being prosecuted at Retailleau’s request.
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