French parents, councilors and human rights campaigners on Friday vowed to "hide" school and college pupils threatened with deportation because their parents are in the country illegally.
Interior Minister Nicolas Sarkozy has ordered local police to round up the youngsters and their families and ensure they are expelled after the school term finishes at the end of next month. Even those who are French-born will not be spared.
The move has outraged opposition party representatives and welfare organizations, leading to calls for a countrywide campaign of civil disobedience.
Pierre Labeyrie, a Green party councilor in Toulouse, said he would have no hesitation in breaking the law.
"We will give these people our support, our protection. If they ask us to shelter them, we will not close our doors, we take them in and feed them," he told the newspaper Liberation.
"We will not denounce them to the police," he said.
A protest group, the Reseau Education sans Frontieres (Education Without Borders), claims to have more than 24,000 signatures against the expulsions.
"For thousands of children and youngsters, June 30, 2006 will not mark the start of the summer holidays but the beginning of their suffering," it said.
"For their holidays these children and youngsters will play at being fugitives for real, with or without their parents, listening out for noises at dawn, trembling when they see a uniform and living with the threat of losing their school, their teachers, their friends for ever. If they're arrested, the biggest game of their summer will be a walk-on role in a sordid police spectacle," it said.
Sarkozy, a member of France's center-right government and presidential hopeful, has been accused of pandering to extreme rightwing voters. He has set a target of 25,000 deportations by the end of this year but said he hoped to exceed this.
He refused to make an exception for those living illegally in France but with children in the education system, saying this would create "another immigration channel."
Liberation quoted the minister as saying: "It was a humane decision not to deport during the school year."
But the paper's editorial was scathing: "In an outburst of kindness the minister of the interior has authorized them [pupils and students] to finish the school year, but no sooner will the school doors close then the wave of deportations will begin. Holidays for some, being hunted and fearful for others."
Sarkozy, whose tough new immigration law was passed by the French lower house of parliament on Wednesday, has declared that foreigners in France could "like it or leave it."
On Friday he was visiting the former French colonies of Mali and Benin where he received hostile receptions.
The day before his visit, the minister agreed to repatriate a woman and her two children, aged five and three, who had been forced on to a plane and expelled to Mali a week ago while their application for residency was under review.
His announcement that the deportation was an "administrative error" and that the family had been granted temporary permission to reside in France, failed to calm tempers in the west African country where he was greeted with cries of "Sarkozy racist."
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