France and Algeria dispute over expulsion policy as tensions between the two countries
Algeria’s Algeria (AP) – The dispute over the fate of 60 Algerians that France hopes to deport has deepened the breakdown between the historic countries over the past year.
On Monday, the Algerian Foreign Ministry rejected the French Algerian “has a dangerous profile” and the list was deported. It said the French Interior Ministry’s list bypassed traditional diplomatic channels to expel such expulsions rather than a legitimate trial of the Algerians.
The ministry’s statement rejects “threat and intimidation attempts, bans, last-minute arts and any mandatory language”.
French right-wing interior minister Bruno Retailleau has previously threatened France could end decades of immigration and visa agreements and promised retaliation in an article on X on Tuesday.
The list discussed is the name of the person who was planned to eviction for the first time in France. These names are a small part of Algerians who have previously indicated that they have designated to deport.
With the rise of conservative forces in France in recent months, officials including Retailleau have pushed for stricter immigration controls, the government has stepped up its efforts to expel Algerians.
Data submitted to the French parliament last year showed that less than 10% of French deportation orders resulted in actual deportation.
The impending deportation included a 37-year-old suspect in the role of stabbing attacks in France last month, with three Tiktok influencers guilty of inciting violence against Jews, Morocco, Morocco or Algerian government opponents.
Due to Algeria’s economic difficulties and political dissatisfaction, officials in the country tend to disagree with former colonizer France.
Algerian officials insist that its country’s refusal to accept people expelled from France is related to concerns about due process.
Although these countries have cooperated on issues such as security, immigration and trade since Algeria broke out from France in a bloody war more than 60 years ago.
But relations deteriorated under French President Emmanuel Macron and Algerian President Abdelmadjid Tebboune.
Macron accused Algerian military-led government of using “French hatred” as a central management principle. Last year, Macron infuriated Algeria by shifting France’s stance to Morocco’s plan for the controversial Western Sahara, which gave controversial territory limited autonomy rather than independence or referendum on self-determination, which Algeria and the pro-independent Polisario front have long demanded.
Since the barb deal between the two countries, France’s position shift has sent the relationship between Paris and Algiers into a declined spiral and has covered a range of themes in the past eight months, including trade restrictions, treatment of France-Algouram writer Boualem Sansal and historic dissatisfaction and historic dissatisfaction and legacy of French nuclear programs, including the Argia nuclear program.
French politicians – including conservatives who joined Macron’s administration last year – accused Algeria of trying to “humiliate” France and threatened to revoke the special status enjoyed by Algerians who wish to immigrate or work in France. This week, they called for the recall of French ambassadors in Algiers and the termination of visas for Algerian diplomats.