Land law reform, the sea serpent of Mayotte

Land law reform, the sea serpent of Mayotte
Land law reform, the sea serpent of Mayotte

After the catastrophe, politics. Four weeks after Cyclone Chido, which destroyed everything in its path, Mayotte is healing its wounds. The emergency bill, supposed to facilitate and accelerate the reconstruction of infrastructure, is presented this Wednesday, January 8 to the Council of Ministers. An essential step but one which cannot resolve the structural difficulties of the archipelago, far from it. The executive is in fact aware that illegal immigration – a subject which does not appear in the text of the law – has become a scourge locally, and for a long time. The reform of land law, a major challenge and mentioned many times, has never gone beyond the stage of declarations of principles.

“Without migratory firmness, we will rebuild Mayotte on sand,” they warned, however, in a…


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