Aid to refugees
Bicycles for refugees in Carcassonne.
We recently donated six refurbished bicycles to refugees in Carcassonne and Limoux. Four new bicycles are in the works.
We learned that Amadou's future had already been decided in his absence and without his on December . His appeal was dismissed, and the OQTF stands. I'm not sure what's going to happen next for this young man, but isn't good news. It seems there's been
of residency rules lately; whereas previously, living responsibly and being into a community for 5 years meant that " " was highly likely, this is no longer the case. This will big problems for the future.
Amadou , a young Guinean migrant, is threatened with an OQTF (obligation to leave French territory).
Last August, We asked you to sign a petition to support the appeal. against Amadou's OQTF. Amadou's hearing takes place on Tuesday, January 10 in Montpellier. Maître Ruffel, who is handling the case, believes the presence of numerous supporters who support Amadou could may influence the Court's decision!
Winter is the most difficult for refugees, especially those who are still sleeping outside. Every year we send clothes and blankets to those who have no shelter, here and elsewhere.
This month of December, in addition to our usual requests for food, We collect men's clothing, blankets and tents.
You will find attached our list of food products as well as the list of collection points where you can drop off your contributions.
Please give generously or, if you prefer, donate on our website using the button below.
Delivery of clothing to refugees in Ventimiglia.
Two of our LSR volunteers have delivered a car loaded with clothes to the Boutik Fraternelle in Menton. There has a real need for (men's) clothing and blankets in Ventimiglia. We We will launch an appeal during the course of next week.
Visa pour l'image 2022.
Visa pour l'image, international photojournalism festival, in Perpignan, 2022 edition.
Of
numerous exhibitions in places that have become legendary, the Couvent des
Minimes, the Dominican Church, the Palais des Corts, the Hotel Pams
etc..
We see all the horrors of the world and we come away shaken.
Of
increasingly concerned by the plight of refugees around the world,
France and in our region, very close to us, I was
particularly sensitive to the exhibition of Sameer Al-Doumy that I had
the chance to meet a Syrian photographer in Perpignan, winner of the Visa
International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) Humanitarian Gold Award 2022,
for his report produced between August 2020 and May 2022 which highlights
shed light on the migration crisis in northern France. After years
transit through countless countries, many migrants who have
fled war or natural disasters find themselves in Calais. They
then spend weeks in makeshift camps on the coast
French, hoping to be able to reach their final destination, the
United Kingdom.
Sameer does not forget that he himself lived the life of a refugee.
Go see his website .
Story of a mobilization.
On the morning of Tuesday 14 June, Roger,
from La Cimade in Narbonne, and I accompanied Yacou and two other migrants who
had been summoned to the prefecture of Carcassonne. The other two quickly
obtained (that day!) their residence permit. Then, Yacou is called to go to a
counter. Roger accompanies him. Then he calls me: Yacou has just received an
Obligation de Quitter le Territoire Français and IRTF for two years, without
delay, with a 45-day house arrest, confiscation of his passport, a ban on
leaving the limits of the commune of Narbonne and the obligation to report to
the police station every day at 3pm.
All three of us are in shock. For us,
Yacou's application for regularisation of exceptional admission to residence
submitted to the prefecture a year earlier should have led to him obtaining a
residence permit: he had responded to all the administration's requests in this
regard.
As soon as we returned to Narbonne, we
looked for a lawyer in Montpellier who was competent in foreigners' rights, who
accepted legal aid and who was available to lodge an appeal with the
administrative court within 48 hours. Me
Kouahou will fulfil this mission.
Legal action and popular action
We had to define a strategy in parallel: we
promised Yacou that we would mobilise publicly if he did not obtain a residence
permit. We choose never to let Yacou go alone to the police station, because we
fear his arrest and deportation to the Ivory Coast where he was born. Yacou
makes a few phone calls to relatives. At 2.50pm, 11 of us are in front of the
police station.
Clara creates a support page for Yacou and
his son Momo. We will publish every day the photo of the people present with
him in front of the police station.
We are also planning a big rally on
Saturday at 2pm in front of the sub-prefecture. Yacou has endeared himself to
many people since his arrival in Narbonne in 2019. And so has his son Mohammed.
He is 12 years old and attends the Cité secondary school, after two years at
the Jean-Jaurès school, plays football at FUN, and attends the leisure centres
of La Maison des Potes and the town of Narbonne. So many places and people to
warn.
We declare the Saturday gathering at the
Narbonne sub-prefecture and we take advantage of it to ask for a meeting with
the sub-prefect in the name of La Cimade de Narbonne, the Accueil Migrant-es du
Narbonnais collective and 100 pour 1 toit du Narbonnais. Political figures were
called upon and approached the prefecture.
The different faces of the Aude
Léo and Claudine contacted the
Réseau Éducation Sans Frontière to set up an online petition. It will exceed 600
signatures in three days.
Yacou arrived in France in 2011, when the
civil war in Côte d'Ivoire put him in danger. He has never really considered
his life outside of France since, even though this country has never given him
a residence permit. At the end of 2016, he managed to bring his son Mohammed to
France. The latter has been continuously attending school in France since
January 2017. He will never see his mother again, who died of illness (and lack
of access to care) in Côte d'Ivoire.
The mobilisation in favour of Yacou and
Momo has been rapid, multiple and growing. Faced with this mobilisation and the
appeal of our lawyer within 48 hours of the refusal of the prefecture with an
OQTF, a two-year ban on returning to the territory and house arrest, the
prefecture of Aude suspended its decisions against Yacou. And on Friday 17 June
in the middle of the afternoon, the prefect summons Yacou for a new meeting on
27 June: he will have a residence permit!
We then decided to maintain the rally the
next day at 2pm in front of the sub-prefecture to celebrate this moment and
show our determination to support the rights of exiled people, wherever they
come from: the call was relayed by so many people! More than two hundred people
are here, despite the heat wave. The Aude showed a beautiful face of solidarity
on 18 June, the day before the disastrous election of three deputies from the
national rally.
For Yacou and Momo, a normal life is finally beginning. For all those who are driven by the values of solidarity and equality, this rapid and intensive struggle should inspire us to face the challenges ahead!