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This story is moving, indeed.

Now, when you look at this situation, there seems to be little that this man can do since the rules have changed. He cannot have his French citizenship anytime soon. I don't know 'these people' ;) but would moving to Paraguay be an option for the couple? What would her status be there? -
I mean no one forces them to stay in France, either. If the French government is incompetent enough to show PhDs the door or simply to not welcome them in - nothing should hold them back, and he should seek his career in Paraguay and be together with his children, too.

I don't support these strange policies but all that can be done at this point is: draw the logical consequences. If France 'doesn't work', emigration is always another option.
 

by Lily (put - lilyalmond - here <a> yahaah.france) on Thu Nov 20th, 2008 at 07:53:03 AM EST
[ Parent ]
They will stay in France, and eventually he'll have his citizenship.
First, you don't seem to appreciate how difficult it is for us westerners to adapt to a much poorer standard of living (yes, that is not something to be particularly proud of). Although, as a translator, she would probably be able to work from a distance

Then, he wouldn't have custody of his children anyway.

And she has recently had breast cancer (despite being just 29). She is apparently fine now, but still with treatment. But I guess she'll want to stay in a country that has one of the best health systems. Paraguay is a poor and terribly unequal society. Not necessarily the dream place to live in.

Still, she did consider it for a while. Now even he has his friends here and I don't think it would happen. I guess what stopped them really was that it takes a brave person to choose Paraguay over France when you are used to having a thousand things we don't really notice anymore. We are spoilt brats.

Earth provides enough to satisfy every man's need, but not every man's greed. Gandhi

by Cyrille (cyrillev domain yahoo.fr) on Thu Nov 20th, 2008 at 08:12:01 AM EST
[ Parent ]
Two other examples : a friend went to Chile for his post-doc. He met his girlfriend there. The next post-doc was in France : the only way she could come was with them married. The good ending is that the friend will probably end up working in Chile, but in essence, they probably wouldn't have married as fast without this necessity. And of course, since there are no gay marriage in France, if they had been of the same sex it would have simply been impossible for his loved one to come...

Much more problematic, I know a couple of a Moroccan and a French. They married two years ago, now have a kid, but things aren't going along so well anymore between them. Getting a divorce is impossible, though ; the woman would have to leave France, and parents living in two different countries can be a bit harsh for raising a kid. (Not mentioning the legal difficulties that would come from determining who is legal guardian). At least there isn't one beating on the other - there have been cases where a battered wife leaving her husband was then deported...

I read many mixed couples from Copenhagen were now living in Sweden, because it was the only way they could live together - what kind of pragmatic solution produces those absurdities ?

Un roi sans divertissement est un homme plein de misères

by linca (antonin POINT lucas AROBASE gmail.com) on Thu Nov 20th, 2008 at 08:37:50 AM EST
[ Parent ]
You should tell your friends to look into what the EU can do for them. There have been a couple of - ah - interesting rulings in this respect. The essence of what the Danish newsies have reported is that the European Court has ruled that living and working legally in another country for any lenght of time makes residency and work permits federal jurisdiction... and that the free movement of labour means that if you're legal in one country and your residency is a matter of federal jurisdiction, you're legal all over the EU (or possibly the Schengen). Punkt, aus, schluss.

So a three-week trip to the Netherlands might be the solution to your friends' problem...

This has caused considerable consternation among certain unsavoury Danish politicians, because you're right, we do have rather a lot of couples living in Malmö (although not all of them for that reason - the undervalued SKK makes having an income in DKK and expenses in SKK a financially attractive proposition in its own right. Plus, houses are cheaper in Sweden because they haven't had a neolib government to Ponzify them for quite as long).

- Jake

If you only spend 20 minutes of the rest of your life on economics, go spend them here.

by JakeS (JangoSierra 'at' gmail 'dot' com) on Thu Nov 20th, 2008 at 11:25:59 AM EST
[ Parent ]
"First, you don't seem to appreciate how difficult it is for us westerners to adapt to a much poorer standard of living"

Oh, I do, I do. But the fact that France is still a nice place to be also puts into perspective the hardship of obtaining citizenship in the first place.

While I don't agree with these odd immigration policies, I believe that IF there is a need to control or limit immigration which I assume is there, at least to some degree, the better way to go would be to accept the status quo, hand out papers to those who are already here (as linca explained got done in Spain) and tighten regulations for those who newly arrive. That way there won't be any bad surprise later. It is inhumane to welcome people into the country and later drop, i.e. deport them.

To not grant citizenship to foreigners upon marrying a French citizen - is VERY bizarre to say the least.

Well, since these deportations take place, I'd still be interested in figures of torture and killings those deported actually experience... because much of the hardship actually seems to be the lower standard of living that awaits them. It sounds (is) right wing rhetoric. I've actually had to adjust before... but it still isn't a matter of life or death, like when linca is comparing the situation to the deportation of German Jews back to Germany in WWII.

It is a pity that the underlying "standard of living" argument somehow discredits the more serious concerns with regards to systematic deportations.

Your friends have decided to remain in France, and I wish them all the best; he'll have his citizenship, as you say, and hopefully, she's healed for good.

by Lily (put - lilyalmond - here <a> yahaah.france) on Thu Nov 20th, 2008 at 08:38:22 AM EST
[ Parent ]
As we are saying, the need is there so that Sarkozy could get Le Pen voters. If fact, the current demographic set-up of France could welcome some more (young, hard working) immigrants to help pay for the social system.

As for the matter of life and death, right now every few months people die, trying to escape the police that come to arrest them - do these people think being deported is a matter of life and death ? (Note that not having the proper papers to live in France is not a felony, in France). The known unknown number is that of thousands who die trying to cross the Mediterranean Sea - a less absurdly harsh policy, giving hope of actual migration, would also result in fewer such deaths. The unknown is that of statistics on what happens to the deported : the French state is not interested in them, and for a volunteer organisation, following up on thousands of people in a hundred countries, many of them not caring so much about human rights and free speech, isn't easy.

Deportations is not only a life and death matter (and I was not comparing the current deportation with those of the second world war, just pointing out the absurdity of saying "you can't deport people back to their own country") : making sure there are thousands of illegals in France is quite useful for those employers that rely on immigrant labor (mostly agriculture, food and house building - strangely, those people are traditionally UMP voters), and also has a cost in terms of unreceived taxes on that undeclared labor - which could be useful to fill the coffers of the Sécurité Sociale. More worrying, thanks to denunciations of parents that had come to register their kids for schools, and arrests of parents that were taking up their children after school, now they may stop sending those children to school...

Un roi sans divertissement est un homme plein de misères

by linca (antonin POINT lucas AROBASE gmail.com) on Thu Nov 20th, 2008 at 09:03:16 AM EST
[ Parent ]
"The known unknown number is that of thousands who die trying to cross the Mediterranean Sea"

Not all die. So there is still a very significant number who try to come to Europe but there are no exact figures, neither this way nor with regards to their forced return except the number of those actually deported (because these numbers are LePen voters' delight...).

Fact is this debate lacks facts - no matter who it is who is not going after these figures or who is deliberately withholding them.

What also strikes me is that you say that people (everyone?) has the right to stay in France (no citizenship needed? no Green card? no visa?) - and then, you talk of thousands of illegals in France.

So, again, it seems that you and I lack facts.  

 

by Lily (put - lilyalmond - here <a> yahaah.france) on Thu Nov 20th, 2008 at 09:45:07 AM EST
[ Parent ]
Facts aren't only numbers, (although they are important, and show the policy is "statistics" driven, i.e. in the summer of 2006, the government claimed it would examine all parents of children asking for papers - only Sarkozy announced beforehand the number of people who would get papers, and strangely the number of people getting papers matched - i.e., people in similar conditions got papers depending on when the decision about them was taken) but also, as we pointed out, various absurd and tragic situations people are put in by this policy. A policy you "assume" is necessary, despite any argument or fact in favor of it, except that it allows Sarkozy to get the racist vote.

An unfair law that serves no purposes should be repealed even for one death.

Legally, some categories of immigrants have the right to remain in France and thus to get papers (Carte de séjour) without asking for the French citizenship. Ill people who could be healed if sent back to their country, family of people who have the right to stay in France (because the right to live with one's family is a human right) ; usually, foreign employees have no limit to their visas... But even for those being illegally in France, forcefully deporting them requires more arguments than simply wanting to appease racists.

Un roi sans divertissement est un homme plein de misères

by linca (antonin POINT lucas AROBASE gmail.com) on Thu Nov 20th, 2008 at 09:56:09 AM EST
[ Parent ]
"A policy you "assume" is necessary"

I DON'T KNOW whether it is necessary.

"Family of people who have the right to stay in France (because the right to live with ones family is a human right)" - Sure.

by Lily (put - lilyalmond - here <a> yahaah.france) on Thu Nov 20th, 2008 at 10:38:44 AM EST
[ Parent ]
I was thinking of this "IF there is a need to control or limit immigration which I assume is there" having forgotten the IF. Excuse me.

What I mean is that the deleterious effects of the policy are established, even if some of the problems are not fully quantified. So the debate should be about the need to control or limit immigration ; and even if such a need were "proven" (which will have to depend on a whole lot of assumption about what is "good" for a country), whether the policies being applied are not overly harsh.

Un roi sans divertissement est un homme plein de misères

by linca (antonin POINT lucas AROBASE gmail.com) on Thu Nov 20th, 2008 at 10:45:31 AM EST
[ Parent ]

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