-
Millions of Perrier bottles blocked in south of France over bacteria concerns
Anomalies found at plant in Gard
-
Pink number plates officially arrive in France from 2026
The new system is designed to help curb fraud and make checks easier for police
-
British teen resident in France had to register in EES on reentry
13-year-old without a DCEM young person’s travel document was told he would be subject to the 90/180 days rule
French baker stops hunger strike as trainee given papers
The apprentice baker from Guinea was faced with deportation from France - and his employer went on hunger strike in protest
Apprentice baker Laye Fodé Traoré has been given authorisation to stay in France – meaning his employer, baker Stéphane Ravacley, has brought his 10-day hunger-strike to an end.
Mr Ravacley told AFP yesterday that Mr Traoré got the good news at a meeting with the prefecture in Haute-Sâone.
He said: “Laye has been regularised! He is coming back to work on Tuesday!”
Mr Ravacley ate nothing but broth during his protest and was taken to hospital at one point, after fainting in his car outside his bakery in Besançon.
Upon receiving the news Mr Traoré “practically cried”, Mr Ravacley said. “He thanked his boss, his teachers and the French state.
“It is a great joy and a victory. Now we are going to fight for the others.”
Stéphane Ravacley and Laye Fodé Traoré at La Huche à Pain bakery in Besançon (@Mokobe113 / Twitter)
Baker questions immigration system
Mr Ravacley began his hunger strike to help Mr Traoré, but also to highlight what he saw as a fault in the French immigration system. He questioned why the State allows unaccompanied minors without papers to stay in France, and start building a life, only to oblige them to leave as soon as they turn 18.
This was the case for Mr Traoré, who travelled from the Republic of Guinea to France, alone, aged 16. He learned to speak French, found employment in the bakery, enrolled on the CAP bakery course, and found an apartment, but was denied a titre de séjour when he turned 18.
The prefecture said Mr Traoré’s case was initially denied over concerns his identity papers were not authentic. His papers have since been validated by the Guinean embassy in France.
Mr Traoré has received widespread support for his cause. As well as his employer’s hunger strike, an online petition garnered over 220,000 signatures, and high-profile celebrities and politicians signed an open letter to President Macron asking for Mr Traoré to be allowed to stay in France.
