All Palestinians in Gaza are eligible for asylum in France, court rules
FRANCE, JUL 15 – The court recognized Israeli military actions as persecution under the 1951 Geneva Convention, potentially extending refugee protection to 400,000 Palestinians lacking UN status, granting 10-year residency rights.
- In July 2025, France’s National Court of Asylum decided that all Palestinians residing in Gaza qualify to seek full refugee protection under French asylum laws.
- The decision came after a Palestinian mother and her son, initially refused asylum by the French authority responsible for refugee and stateless person protection, were ultimately recognized as refugees due to persecution they faced from Israel.
- The court cited Israel's warfare methods causing civilian casualties, destruction, forced displacement, and humanitarian crises, relying largely on United Nations reports to support its decision.
- The court determined that these tactics constituted sufficiently severe acts to be classified as persecution and therefore applied the 1951 Refugee Convention, with legal experts highlighting that this ruling probably impacts approximately 20% of Gaza’s population who are not protected by the UN.
- The decision provoked backlash from right-wing politicians warning of potential mass migration, while supporters and the French government emphasize humanitarian responsibility amid the ongoing Gaza conflict and refugee crisis.
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39 Articles
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French Court Grants All Gazans Asylum Eligibility, Citing IDF Persecution
In a landmark ruling, France’s National Court of Asylum (CNDA) has granted asylum eligibility to all Palestinians in Gaza, citing “persecution” by the Israeli Defense Forces (IDF) as a basis for refugee status under international law. Why it matters: The decision opens France’s doors to potentially thousands of Gazans, raising humanitarian hopes but fueling concerns about integration, security, and the precedent it sets for European asylum polic…
The National Court of Asylum has just handed down a decision that facilitates the granting of refugee status to the inhabitants of Gaza, and the consequences are likely to be limited.
The National Court of the Right to Asylum (CNDA) has granted Gazans the right to apply for refugee status in France, based on their nationality. This decision now allows anyone who so wishes to apply for asylum on French territory. A measure which has not failed to provoke the reaction of Marine Le Pen.The announcement of the unconditional reception of all Gazans who would apply for it, under the right to asylum, is a pure madness.
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