Algeria is refusing to readmit a number of its citizens, criminals or illegal immigrants, expelled from France, creating a diplomatic dispute between the two countries.
French Prime Minister, François Bayrou, threatens to dismantle a 1968 bilateral agreement on Algerian immigration in France, a text that the right and the far right present as a symbol of France's supposed generosity towards Algeria.
However, this agreement has had little real impact and no longer justifies a special regime for Algerians.
The current French government has not adopted a consistent stance or a suitable approach towards renegotiating or reconsidering this agreement.
The aggressive rhetoric from Paris and the disunity within the government on this issue benefits Algeria's authoritarian government.
This situation also fuels Algerian nationalism, putting Algerians living in France and French people of Algerian origin in a difficult position.
Conclusion: The French government, which claims to want to control the flow of migrants and facilitate the deportations of Algerians, must adopt a coherent and ordered strategy towards Algeria. Otherwise, these issues will continue to foster political disputes with no concrete result, other than fueling the far right.