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Asylum-seeker to film star: Guinean's unusual journey highlights France's arguments over immigration

Landing in the midst of heated arguments in France about immigration comes an award-winning film about the issue with an eye-popping twist: Its lead actor Abou Sangare is himself an immigrant lacking permanent legal status

Diane Jeantet
Thursday 10 October 2024 06:08 EDT

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A few months ago, Abou Sangare was an anonymous, 23-year-old Guinean immigrant lacking permanent legal status in northern France and, like thousands of others, fighting deportation.

Now a lead actor in “Souleymane’s Story,” an award-winning feature film that hit French theaters this week, his face is on every street corner and in subway stations, bus stops and newspapers.

The film and Sangare’s sudden success are casting light on irregular migration in France just as its new government is taking a harder line on the issue. It is vowing to make it harder for immigrants lacking permanent legal status to stay and easier for France to expel them.

Sangare plays a young asylum-seeker who works as a Paris delivery man, weaving his bicycle through traffic in the City of Light. In a case of life imitating art, Sangare's future also hangs in the balance. Like the character he portrays, Sangare is hoping to persuade French officials to grant him residency and abandon their efforts to force him to leave.

“When I see Souleymane sitting in the French Office for the Protection of Refugees and Stateless Persons, I put myself in his place, because I know what it’s like to wait for your (identification) papers here in France, to be in this situation — the stress, the anxiety,” Sangare told The Associated Press in an interview.

“Like me, Souleymane finds himself in an environment that he doesn’t know.”

Sangare says he left Guinea at age 15 in 2016 to help his sick mother. He first went to Algeria, then Libya, where he was jailed and treated “as a slave” after a failed crossing attempt. Italy was next, and he eventually set foot in France in May 2017.

His request to be recognized as a minor was turned down, but he was able to study at high school and trained as a car mechanic — a skill in demand in France. Recently, he was offered full-time employment at a workshop in Amiens, a northern French town that has been his home for seven years and which, incidentally, was French President Emmanuel Macron's hometown, too.

But Sangare cannot accept the job because of his illegal status. He's unsuccessfully applied three times for papers and lives with a deportation order over his head.

Critics say deportation orders have been increasingly used by successive governments.

“We are the country in Europe that produces most expulsion procedures, far ahead of other countries,” said Serge Slama, a professor in public law at the University of Grenoble.

But their use — more than 130,000 deportations were ordered in 2023 — is "highly inefficient,” he added, because many of the orders aren't or cannot for legal reasons be carried out.

Interior Minister Bruno Retailleau says about 10% of people targeted for deportation end up leaving.

Retailleau, appointed in France's new government of conservatives and centrists last month, is making immigration control a priority.

He wants more immigrants lacking permanent legal status to be held in detention centers and for longer periods, and is leaning on regional administrators to get tough.

He also says he wants to reduce the number of foreigners entering France by making it “less attractive,” including squeezing social benefits for them.

Mathilde Buffière, who works with immigrants in administrative detention centers with the nonprofit Groupe SOS Solidarités, says officials are spending “less and less time" reviewing immigrants' residency applications before holding them in detention centers.

In Sangare’s case, his life took a turn last year when he met filmmaker Boris Lojkine. Several auditions led to him getting the film's lead role.

Sangare won Best Actor at the Cannes Film Festival’s “Un Certain Regard” competition this year.

But a more meaningful prize might be on the horizon: After Cannes, government officials emailed Sangare, inviting him to renew his residency application.

Responding to AP questions, French authorities said the deportation order against Sangare “remains legally in force" but added that officials reexamined his case because of steps he's taken to integrate.

“I think the film did that,” Sangare told AP.

“You need a residency permit to be able to turn your life around here. My life will change the day I have my papers,” he said.

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