
The Administrative Court of Nantes, which has national jurisdiction for visa litigation, issued an order on 23 October (№ 2513818) dismissing as “manifestly unfounded” a consular decision that had refused a business visa to a Turkish applicant flagged for security concerns.
The consulate in Istanbul had relied on an intelligence note suggesting links to a company under U.S. sanctions. Judges found the file lacked concrete evidence and that the refusal disproportionately harmed the applicant’s French client, a Brittany-based tech start-up awaiting on-site installation of equipment.
Legal analysts see the ruling as a reminder that post-Ukraine heightened vigilance cannot override due-process guarantees. For enterprises, it underscores the value of submitting detailed project documentation and end-user certificates when sensitive-sector staff need French visas on short notice.
The Interior Ministry may appeal to the Conseil d’État, but for now the judgment compels issuance of the visa within two weeks, paving the way for the project—and signalling that economic considerations still carry weight in French visa jurisprudence.
The consulate in Istanbul had relied on an intelligence note suggesting links to a company under U.S. sanctions. Judges found the file lacked concrete evidence and that the refusal disproportionately harmed the applicant’s French client, a Brittany-based tech start-up awaiting on-site installation of equipment.
Legal analysts see the ruling as a reminder that post-Ukraine heightened vigilance cannot override due-process guarantees. For enterprises, it underscores the value of submitting detailed project documentation and end-user certificates when sensitive-sector staff need French visas on short notice.
The Interior Ministry may appeal to the Conseil d’État, but for now the judgment compels issuance of the visa within two weeks, paving the way for the project—and signalling that economic considerations still carry weight in French visa jurisprudence.





