Two uniformed gendarmes stand in a park, one facing forward and the other turned away, showcasing their tactical gear and presence in a public space.

Two uniformed gendarmes stand in a park, one facing forward and the other turned away, showcasing their tactical gear and presence in a public space.
French police via Flickr

France, yet again, in what has become a now-familiar but deeply unsettling pattern, for the was shaken this week by another crime that has reignited public anger over mass migration and the state’s failure to enforce its own laws.

In the town of Melun, south of Paris, a 15-year-old girl was allegedly raped by a foreign national from North Africa who was already under an order to leave French territory, the French outlet Valeurs Actualles reported.

The suspect, a 22-year-old Algerian migrant, had been living without a fixed address and was known to authorities for previous offenses. Despite being subject to an expulsion order, he was still free to move through public transport and residential neighborhoods.

According to police accounts, the teenager was approached and harassed on a bus late in the evening. After she got off, the man reportedly followed her into a public square, where the assault is said to have taken place.

After the attack, the suspect fled but continued contacting the victim through social media. That digital trail led police to a municipal gymnasium being used as emergency accommodation for migrants and homeless individuals, where he was eventually arrested.

Authorities confirmed that the suspect had prior entries in France’s criminal records database. He was also already flagged for removal from the country, raising questions—yet again—about why the order had never been enforced.

For French citizens, the case—and similar cases, of which there are too many to count—has become emblematic of a broader breakdown in state authority driven by unceasing mass migration from culturally alien societies into the Western world.

For French citizens, the case—and similar cases, of which there are too many to count—has become emblematic of a systemic breakdown in state authority driven by unceasing mass migration from culturally incompatible societies into the West.

Deportation orders are issued routinely, yet rarely carried out, leaving communities exposed to preventable violence.

The Melun case comes amid long-standing and rising tensions in other parts of France. In Marseille, riots erupted following Algeria’s elimination from the Africa Cup of Nations in 2025, with unrest spilling far beyond the soccer field.

Groups of Algeria fans took to the streets late at night, torching cars, destroying street furniture, and setting garbage containers ablaze. Entire neighborhoods were plunged into chaos, forcing residents indoors as fires burned unchecked.

Videos circulating online showed scenes resembling urban unrest rather than sports-related disappointment. For locals, the violence reinforced a growing sense that parallel societies operate beyond the reach of French law.

Incidents such as these are not isolated, but part of a recurring pattern. Crimes and riots linked to migrant populations are followed by official silence, government excuses, and calls to avoid “stigmatization.”

The statistics tell a harsher story. Deportation orders, particularly for nationals of countries such as Algeria, are enforced in only a tiny fraction of cases, rendering the system largely symbolic.

Previous tragedies have underscored the consequences of this failure. High-profile cases involving the rape and murder of minors by individuals under expulsion orders continue to haunt the national conscience.

Despite these warnings, government after government in France—and across much of Europe—have doubled down on policies that prioritize mass migration over public safety. Borders remain porous, enforcement deeply inconsistent, and accountability absent.

For women and girls, the cost of this left-liberal globalist ideology is paid in fear and vulnerability. Safe streets, once taken for granted, are now conditional on time, place, and luck.

Working- and middle-class families bear the brunt of these policies, while political elites remain insulated from their effects. Calls for “living together” ring mean nothing when the state cannot even guarantee basic security.

The post Macron’s France Fails To Protect Its Citizens Again: Algerian Migrant With Deportation Order Arrested for Raping 15-Year-Old Girl appeared first on The Gateway Pundit.