In Paris, hundreds of migrants occupy Paris landmark

Demand talks with the prime minister on regularising their status


Afp July 13, 2019
Hundreds of undocumented migrants entered the Pantheon in Paris while others stayed outside demanding that the French authorities move to regularise their situation. PHOTO: AFP

PARIS: Hundreds of undocumented migrants surged into the Pantheon in central Paris on Friday, briefly occupying the vaunted memorial complex to demand talks with the prime minister on regularising their status, activists said.

Around 700 migrants and their supporters joined the demonstration, with some pushing into the historic complex at around midday (1100 GMT) on Friday, a member of the Chapelle Debout collective said. Footage posted on Twitter from inside the building's main dome showed hundreds of people waving papers in the air shouting "Black vests, black vests!" and "What do we want? Papers!"

The so-called "Black Vests" is a Paris-based migrant association that takes its name from the "yellow vest" anti-government protest movement.

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The Pantheon is the final resting place of France's greatest non-military luminaries including the writers Voltaire, Victor Hugo and Emile Zola. PHOTO: AFP The Pantheon is the final resting place of France's greatest non-military luminaries including the writers Voltaire, Victor Hugo and Emile Zola. PHOTO: AFP

As they went inside, tourists were evacuated from the Pantheon, which is the final resting place of France's greatest non-military luminaries including the writers Voltaire, Victor Hugo and Emile Zola.

Outside, hundreds more were gathered under the watchful eyes of a heavy police presence.

In a statement, the Black Vest protesters said they wanted "papers and housing for everyone", describing themselves as "the undocumented, the voiceless and the faceless of the French Republic".

"We don't want to negotiate with the interior minister and his officials any more, we want to talk to Prime Minister Edouard Philippe now!" they wrote.

The demonstrators want the French government to agree to an exceptional regularisation, which would legalise their status in France. PHOTO: AFP The demonstrators want the French government to agree to an exceptional regularisation, which would legalise their status in France. PHOTO: AFP

They stayed there for several hours until they were calmly evacuated through a back entrance mid-afternoon, AFP correspondents said.

"All of the people who gained entry to the Pantheon have been evacuated," Philippe tweeted early evening as a police source said 37 arrests had been made.

"France is a country based on the rule of law which means respect for the rules that apply to the right to remain, respect for public monuments and for the memory they represent," he added.

Some leftist lawmakers came to the site to offer moral support to the migrants but Marine Le Pen, leader of the far-right National Rally, tweeted her indignation.

"It is UNACCEPTABLE to see protesting illegal aliens occupy, with wholesale impunity, this is the centre of the Republic," Le Pen said.

"Expulsion should be the immigrants' future - that is the LAW," she said.

"The Pantheon is a symbol of great men. Inside there are symbols representing the fight against slavery. We are fighting against modern-day slavery," said Laurent, an activist from French rights group Droits Devant.

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"Many people have been living without rights for years. We have done this to ask the prime minister for an exceptional regularisation. There has never been such a thing since (Francois) Mitterand took power" in 1981.

"It's about time we had one."

After demonstrating for several hours, the migrants were escorted calmly out of a back entrance. PHOTO: AFP After demonstrating for several hours, the migrants were escorted calmly out of a back entrance. PHOTO: AFP

The "Black Vests" are known for staging headline-grabbing protests in support of the undocumented.

In June, they briefly occupied the headquarters of the Paris-based Elior Group which works in contract catering and property.

And a month earlier, its activists occupied terminal 2F at the city's Charles De Gaulle airport against "Air France's collaboration" in the deportation of undocumented migrants.

COMMENTS (1)

Bunny Rabbit | 5 years ago | Reply France does not owe anything to them . It might be their moral duty to take care of these immigrants. But why can't the latter conglomerate like this and go back to their home countries with the same fervour and organisational skills .
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