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End of land rights in Mayotte: why must the Constitution be changed?

2024-02-11T13:33:56.574Z

Highlights: The Minister of the Interior and Overseas Territories Gérald Darmanin announced this Sunday, February 11, “the end of land rights in Mayotte” The objective being to “cut off the attractiveness that there is in the Mahorais archipelago ” But is it possible? “Yes”, unanimously decide the constitutionalists interviewed by Le Figaro. “Theoretically, if you revise the Constitution, you can put everything in it because the latter is considered ‘the norm above the hierarchy of national norms’”


In order to “cut off the attractiveness” of the Mahorais archipelago, the Minister of the Interior Gérald Darmanin announced this Sunday “the end of land rights in Mayotte”. To do this, the executive is considering a “constitutional revision”.


An exceptional measure.

The Minister of the Interior and Overseas Territories Gérald Darmanin announced this Sunday, February 11, upon arriving on the French archipelago,

“the end of land rights in Mayotte”

.

This

“radical measure”

will be permitted by a

“constitutional revision that the President of the Republic will choose”

, specified the tenant of Place Beauvau.

Before deciding:

“It will therefore no longer be possible to become French, if you are not yourself the child of a French parent.”

The objective being to

“cut off the attractiveness that there is in

the Mahorais archipelago

”.

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But is it possible?

“Yes”,

unanimously decide the constitutionalists interviewed by

Le Figaro

.

“Theoretically, if you revise the Constitution, you can put everything in it because the latter is considered “the norm above the hierarchy of national norms”,”

explains public law lecturer Benjamin Morel straight away.

An already special status

But why resort to such an approach when the island in the Indian Ocean already has a special status?

“We have in fact already singled out Mayotte, as a department, via article 73 of the Constitution which provides that “if the laws and regulations are automatically applicable there, these provisions may be subject to adaptations taking into account to the particular characteristics and constraints of these communities.”

The uniqueness of Mahor is due in particular to its proximity to the Comoros, located some 200 kilometers from the archipelago and where a significant amount of illegal immigration comes from.

In Mayotte, one in two inhabitants is foreign.

Since the Asylum and Immigration law of 2018, land law is already limited in the 101st French department.

Concretely, it is required for children born to foreign parents in Mayotte, that at least one of their two parents has, on the day of birth, resided on French territory for more than three months and on a regular basis.

This particular provision is not valid anywhere else.

“The archipelago therefore already has a special regime with a unique application of the law on immigration matters,”

explains specialist Benjamin Morel.

“We can therefore try to go further by adapting the law.

But the Constitutional Council could prevent it, because ultimately, it is the latter which will set limits.

The question is therefore: at what point do we leave article 73 of the Constitution?”,

further questions the constitutionalist.

Because

“by removing land law in Mayotte, we would go very far in the question of adapting laws in local communities

,” insists an academic, expert in asylum and immigration issues.

“And the

Constitutional Council

could consider that this is opposed to the principle of state unity.”

Constitutionalize to secure

The desire of the executive to go through a constitutional revision could thus come from its conviction of having

“already gone far in terms of twisting the law”,

analyzes Benjamin Morel.

And this would make it possible to

“secure”

the particular regime of the archipelago.

However, specialists warn:

“If you include this Mahoran exception in the Constitution, you are structurally singling it out,”

warns Benjamin Morel.

“Because, when we single out communities in the Constitution, we single them out with regard to their degree of autonomy (depending on whether they are COM, DROM, or common law communities)”.

However, here, the executive wants to single out the Mahorais case

“to provide for mitigation of the rights of individuals in the territory”,

details the lecturer in public law.

“We would therefore include a “baroque” if not “bizarre” mention in the Constitution, because Mayotte would only be mentioned there for the restriction of certain rights.

And the latter would not concern the rights of communities but the rights of individuals,”

asks Benjamin Morel.

Especially since the effectiveness of such a measure

“is far from obvious”

, warns the academic.

“Soil law actually has nothing to do with the problems of Mayotte,”

he says, detailing

 :

“The migrants who come from the Comoros come first because of the gap in living standards between the two archipelagos.

Whether this concerns income, with gaps of 1 in 10, but also the presence of maternity wards and schools

.

According to the expert, Mayotte is therefore a major land of immigration because it appears like an

“El Dorado”

.

And not because it offers nationality to migrants, which, moreover, is not automatic”

[to obtain French nationality at the age of 18 when one was born in France to foreign parents, the rule of common law stipulates that 'You must have lived in the country for at least five years since the age of 11,

Editor's note

].

Moreover,

“the 2018 law, already restrictive, had no effect on the attractiveness of the archipelago while it made it harder to obtain nationality”

, underlines the expert, qualifying this announcement as real

“red rag”

.

Source: lefigaro

All news articles on 2024-02-11

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