What
follows is one representative newspaper account of the strange story of Merhan
Karimi Nasseri, a man without country, trapped by his lack of papers in Charles
De Gaulle Airport in Paris, France, since
The
2004 Tom Hanks film The Terminal
is loosely based upon the experiences of Merhan Karimi Nasseri
He could be any passenger waiting for a flight, sitting
patiently on a red plastic bench in Charles
He sips a cup of hot chocolate and scans the crowd, occasionally cocking his
head to listen to the airport announcements. He peruses a book, Hillary Rodham
Clinton's "It Takes a Village."
But Merhan Karimi Nasseri is going nowhere. He has been waiting for a flight
out of France, he says, for
Nasseri was expelled from Iran a decade ago for his political views. Through a
series of fateful missteps, he landed here without any documents. Since then,
Europe's increasingly stiff stance toward refugees and his fragile mental state
have kept him at the airport here in legal limbo.
His is a story of broken hopes and bureaucracy, of a trip across Europe in
search of a homeland that became a journey into mental chaos and despair. And
it is a story of a man who has searched for his family, only to find an adopted
one here, at Charles
"He's like a part of the airport. Everyone knows him," says Muhamed
Mourrid, the manager of the Bye Bye Bar, pointing to the spot where
Among the annals of horrific refugee tales, Nasseri's story is remarkable for
its pathos and complexity. It begins in Iran in 1977, when Nasseri, fresh from
studying in England, was expelled for protesting against the shah. His expulsion
left him without a passport.
Nasseri came to Europe. He bounced from capital to capital, applying for
refugee status and being refused, again and again, for nearly four years. In
1981, his request for political asylum from Iran was finally granted by the
United Nations High Commission for Refugees in Belgium.
That decision gave him refugee credentials, which in turn allowed him to seek
citizenship in a European country. The son of an Iranian and a Briton, Nasseri
decided in 1986 on England with the hope of finding relatives there.
He got as far as Paris, where in 1988 his briefcase containing his refugee
documents was stolen in a train station.
Nasseri boarded a plane for London anyway. But when officials at Heathrow
Airport found he had no passport, they sent him back to Charles de Gaulle. At
first, the French police arrested him for illegal entry. But as Nasseri had no
documents, there was no country of origin to which he could be deported.
So he took up residence in
But the court could not force the French government to allow him out of the
airport onto French soil. In fact, Bourget said, French authorities refused to
give Nasseri either a refugee or transit visa. "It was pure
bureaucracy," said the lawyer. French immigration authorities have no
comment on the case.
Bourget and Nasseri then focused on Belgium, where they hoped to reclaim
Nasseri's original refugee documents. But Belgian refugee officials refused to
mail them to him in France. They argued that Nasseri had to present himself in
person so that they could be sure he was the same man to whom they had granted
political asylum years before.
But, inexplicably, the Belgian government refused at that point to allow
Nasseri to return there. And under Belgian law, a refugee who voluntarily
leaves a country that has accepted him cannot return.
In 1995, the Belgian government finally told Nasseri that he could retrieve his
refugee documents if he agreed to live in Belgium under the supervision of a
social worker. Nasseri refused. He said he would move only to Great Britain.
And so here he has remained, year after year. At first glance, the dignified
man does not appear to be a refugee who sleeps on an airport bench because he
has nowhere else to go. His clothes are clean, his moustache well-trimmed. He
keeps his one blazer covered with plastic wrap, hanging from an airport cart.
His belongings are carefully packed in a frayed suitcase and a stack of
Lufthansa boxes.
Nasseri nods hello to a clerk, who calls him "Alfred," his nickname
here. He follows the news closely, thanks to the most recent Time magazine,
which the postman has just dropped off. And he loves to discuss the new
selections from the Book-of-the-Month Club. "I just keep on reading, every
day," said the soft-spoken Nasseri, a courtly gentleman who rises and
offers his seat to a visitor. "I just keep waiting here."
His pallid complexion is testament to his inability to cross the airport
threshold to the outside world. He walks to the doors of
Nasseri's confused account of his plight speaks to the psychological price he
has paid in his fight to become a man who belongs somewhere. "Nobody could
suffer all he did and stay normal," noted Bourget.
The sad truth is this: After fighting for years to leave the airport and apply for
citizenship elsewhere, Nasseri was afraid to do so when the opportunity arose.
Belgium offered Nasseri the chance to settle there, but he refused. "Now,
I think he will stay in the airport until he dies," Bourget concluded
softly.
His bizarre tale has brought him a degree of fame. He has been the subject of
news reports from Finland to Britain. His life story became a 1994 French film,
starring Jean Rochefort.
Nasseri gets fewer visitors now to punctuate the long days down on
Several times a week, the airport priest stops by to visit him, as does
His life follows the quotidian airport cycle. He wakes at 5:30 in order to
shave in the men's room before passengers arrive. He reads all day long. At
night, he waits until the airport stores are locked before he brushes his teeth
with the toothbrush and toothpaste from a complimentary airline travel kit.
Weekly, he rinses out his clothes overnight in the bathroom.
Nasseri is renowned throughout the airport for his refusal to ask for help.
"We have a colleague who gave him clothes, but he returned them, saying
'I'm not a beggar,'" said Crystelle L'Hospitalier, a Lufthansa clerk. But
he has to eat, and accepts occasional meal vouchers and francs from
stewardesses and airport staff.
As the years have slipped by, it has become increasingly clear that Nasseri
will never leave Charles
"An airport is kind of a place between heaven and earth," said
Danielle Yzerman, spokeswoman for Charles
Nasseri, who has since adopted the name
"Sir, Alfred Merhan" (that's not a
Over the years, he has claimed many things about his
origins. At one time his mother was Swedish, another time English. Nasseri's
effectively reinvented himself in the Charles de Gaulle airport and denies
these days that he's Iranian, deflecting any conversation about his childhood
in Tehran. ("He pretends he doesn't speak Persian," his longtime
lawyer, Christian Bourguet, says. "He was interviewed by Iranian
journalists and made believe he didn't understand.") When we first met two
years ago, he insisted that the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees
was attempting to locate his parents in order to establish his identity. But a
spokeswoman for the agency dismissed the assertion as "pure folly."
Early on in his saga, Nasseri maintained that he was expelled from his homeland
for antigovernment activity in 1977. According to a number of reports, Nasseri
protested against the regime of Shah Mohammed Reza Pahlevi while a student in
England, and when he returned to Iran, found himself imprisoned, and shortly
thereafter exiled.
He bounced around Europe for a few years with temporary refugee papers,
alighting finally in Belgium, where he was awarded official refugee status in
1981. He traveled to Britain and France without difficulty until 1988, when he
landed at Charles de Gaulle airport after being denied entry into Britain,
because, he contends, his passport and refugee certificate were stolen in a
mugging on a Paris subway. Nasseri could not prove who he was, nor offer proof
of his refugee status. So he moved into the Zone d'attente, a holding area for
travelers without papers.
He stayed for days, then weeks — then months, then years. As his bizarre
odyssey stretched on, Bourguet, the noted French human rights lawyer, took on
the case, and the news media piled on. Articles appeared around the world, and
Nasseri became the subject of three documentary films. (Oddly, apparently none
of his friends or relatives have attempted to contact him.)2
As of 2005, Nasseri is still living in the airport. He does not
lack for money, as Dreamworks paid him a rumored $250,000 for the film rights
to his story.
Nasseri is known
for his honesty (when he isn't talking about himself) and his refusal of
charity. On two occasions he turned in billfolds full of money that had been
mislaid by passengers. Airline and airport personnel push meal vouchers on him
so he can eat. "French fries are my favorite," he confides.
"It's not a very healthy diet, but I get enough."
On 17 September 1999, an international travel card and a French residency
permit were put into Nasseri's hands. With them, he's now free to leave the
airport, either to take up residency in France or to fly to another country
that will allow him entry. He refuses to sign them, however, because they list
his nationality as Iranian, and he wants it listed as British. He remains at
Charles de Gaulle airport, using the excuse that he's determined to stick to
this point rather than face life outside the terminal: