The French government has quietly backtracked on a policy that allows children to leave the country without their parents’ permission, after years of complaints from families of radicalised teens who left to join extremist groups.
The new rules requiring parental permission go into effect from Sunday, five years after the government lifted the restriction with little fanfare, citing a need to streamline bureaucracy.
At the time, the war in Syria was picking up and France became Europe’s largest source of recruits in the war zone, notably for the Islamic State group. Families said they were blind-sided when their teenage sons and daughters were allowed to pass through border control with no questions asked and even leave Europe’s passport-free zone for Turkey.
“We have to do everything we can to prevent minors from going into the terrorist zone,” lawmaker Patrick Hetzel told France 3.
To critics, it is ‘far too late’
But critics say the reversal comes far too late.
Samia Maktouf, a lawyer for two families that sued the government over their teenagers’ departures for Syria, has called for this policy shift for years.
“Unfortunately, they’re taking action rather late,” she told The Associated Press. “Four hundred French minors are now at the gates of Hell.”