France Declares All Gazans Eligible For Asylum.

 In a landmark ruling, a French court opens the gates to refugees from Gaza, citing Israeli military actions as "persecution" - sparking applause from activists and alarm from security advocates


In a stunning legal pivot, France’s National Court of Asylum (CNDA) has ruled that all Palestinians living in Gaza are now eligible to apply for full asylum status in France, a move with sweeping political and social implications.


The decision stems from a case brought by a Palestinian woman seeking refugee status in the wake of the October 7 Hamas-led terror attacks against Israel. While France's refugee authority (OFPRA) initially rejected her claim, citing a lack of personal persecution, the court overturned that ruling. It

argued that the methods of warfare employed by the Israeli military in Gaza were "serious enough to be regarded as persecution," thereby qualifying the applicant for full refugee protection under the 1951 Geneva Convention.


What makes this decision historic is its precedent-setting scope: it effectively extends eligibility for asylum to all residents of Gaza, not just individuals with specific circumstances, by defining Palestinians as a persecuted group on the basis of “nationality.” This, despite France not formally recognizing Palestine as a state. According to the CNDA, Gazans meet the Convention's criteria for group-based persecution, due to their cultural, linguistic, and geographic identity. The court emphasized their connection to a people "in conflict with another state" as a factor legitimizing their refugee claims.


While many on the left, celebrated the ruling, critics warned that it could lead to negative consequences. Among them was Henda Ayari, a prominent secular activist and former Muslim, who voiced concern over France’s decision to accept refugees from a region where anti-Western and anti-Semitic ideologies are deeply embedded.


“France is already grappling with internal instability, with growing tensions in many immigrant-heavy suburbs,” Ayari wrote on social media. “Now it opens its doors unconditionally to people from a region where terrorist groups operate openly, and where some welcomed the massacres of October 7.”


Her remarks echoed broader unease about the potential national security risks posed by accepting individuals from territories governed by extremist groups like Hamas - especially when even neighboring Muslim countries have refused to accept them.


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