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Cannes best actor win for immigrant France wants to deport shone light on a burning issue

Abou Sangare, who stars in Souleymane’s Story as an asylum seeker and delivery driver in Paris, has a deportation order hanging over him

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Abou Sangare as asylum seeker Souleymane in a still from Souleymane’s Story, a role which earned him a best actor prize at the 2024 Cannes Film Festival. The actor is an immigrant himself, and faces deportation from France. Photo: Instagram/@escurialpanorama

A few months ago, Abou Sangare was an anonymous, 23-year-old Guinean immigrant lacking permanent legal status in northern France and, like thousands of others, fighting.

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Now a lead actor in Souleymane’s Story, an award-winning feature film that hit French cinemas this week, his face is on every street corner and in metro stations, bus stops and newspapers.

The film and Sangare’s sudden success are casting light on irregular migration in France as its new government is taking a harder line on the issue.

It is vowing to make it harder for immigrants lacking permanent legal status to stay and easier for France to expel them.

Sangare plays a young asylum seeker who works as a Paris delivery man, weaving his bicycle through the traffic in the City of Light. In a case of life imitating art, Sangare’s future also hangs in the balance.

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Like the character he portrays, Sangare is hoping to persuade French officials to grant him residency and abandon their efforts to force him to leave.

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