|
Online edition of India's National Newspaper Saturday, May 12, 2001 |
|
Front Page |
National |
Southern States |
Other States |
State Elections |
International |
Opinion |
Business |
Sport |
Miscellaneous |
Features |
Classifieds |
Employment |
Index |
Home |
|
International
| Previous
| Next
Italy: Parties play the immigrants card
By Vaiju Naravane
PUGLIA (SOUTHERN ITALY), MAY 11. High wire fences encircle the
Regina Pacis immigration centre in San Foca, in southern Italy's
Puglia region. A depression has built up over this usually sunny
corner of Italy and the sky is low and overcast.
The refugees sit huddled inside their temporary homes unused to
the cold, the wind and rain. There are Kurds, Afghans,
Bangladeshis, Pakistanis and a sprinkling of Africans. Each of
them has paid the equivalent of $8,000 to $10,000 to traffickers
in human cargo to illegally bring them into Italy. ``I do not
know what is going to happen to us, if we will be allowed to stay
or sent back. We have spent all our money. We cannot pay for our
return. So much has gone for the passage. If we return our
families will be ruined,'' says Mr. Ahmed Sultan (23), an
engineering student who says he left Bangladesh because of
economic deprivation.
Some of the refugees have harrowing tales to tell - about how
they spent months together in the hold of a ship, surviving on a
near-starvation diet. Or how they were transferred from one ship
to another in a place they were later told was Turkey.
``I left Sierra Leone because of the fighting, making my way to
Guinea,'' recounts Mr. Joseph September who spent three months in
a ship's hold with several other West Africans who were smuggled
aboard. ``There was almost no food. For days on end, there was no
water. Man, was I weak when we landed,'' he says with a self-
conscious laugh. ``Then in the middle of the night we touched
land. It was a jetty and the sailors were telling us, run, run to
the other boat. So, we crossed the jetty and crammed into this
other boat that brought us here. It was filled with all these
people you see here - Indians and Chinese and people from other
Asian countries,'' says Mr. Joseph.
Mr. Joseph and Mr. Sultan are among thousands of political
refugees and economic migrants who wash up on Italy's coastal
villages and towns each year. Last year alone, according to
Interior Ministry statistics, over 26,000 illegal immigrants
tried to enter Italy. Many of them are sent back immediately. But
several thousand end up in official immigration centres where
they register as asylum seekers.
``The Government has 30 days in which to study their files and
decide whether they should stay or leave. Many are genuine
political refugees or victims of civil war who have been pushed
out of their homes and villages. The rest are economic migrants
fleeing poverty and unemployment, seeking a better life. At the
end of 30 days, the Government must repatriate those whose asylum
demands have been rejected. However, the Government does not want
to pay their fare. So, those marked out for repatriation in fact
end up entering the illegal labour market because all we can do
is to let them leave once their 30 days here are up,'' explains
the Director of the Regina Pacis centre.
The international charity, Caritas, has been working with many of
these refugees once they get out of the immigration centres. The
Carita's office in Rome is jammed with refugees who have been
``allowed'' to stay. Many have made their way here from
immigration centres like the one in San Foca. Akbar, Rashida and
their five-year-old daughter Taslima are from Bangladesh. They
have come for help to get Taslima enrolled in school. Without
papers or a bank account, it is difficult to complete the
administrative formalities.
``Immigration has become a huge issue although Italy has the
smallest percentage of foreigners among the large E.U. nations.
Less than three per cent of our population is made up of
immigrants and the fear is quite irrational. Moreover, the same
industrialists who employ these people as undeclared labour in
their factories during the day, resent their presence in a bar or
restaurant in the evening. All that is most irrational.''
Both the Alleanza Nazionale and the xenophobic Northern League
which are part of Mr. Silvio Berlusconi's House of Freedoms
coalition are taking a tough line on immigration. The Lega has
said it will propose giving Coast Guards the right to shoot at
dinghies and other craft ferrying illegal immigrants into Italy.
The fact that the immigrants are prepared to work for far less
than what local labour asks per hour has caused enormous
heartburn among Italy's working classes, particularly in the
south, like in Puglia where unemployment is as high as 20 per
cent.
``These people are taking our bread away. There is no point
denying it. Which is why I shall vote for the National
Alliance,'' declared Mr. Gaetano, a mason and construction
worker. ``They should be sent back to where they came from.''
Send this article to Friends by E-Mail
|
|
Section : International Previous : British parties face voter apathy Next : Bush envoys to hold talks in Canada on NMD | |
|
Front Page |
National |
Southern States |
Other States |
State Elections |
International |
Opinion |
Business |
Sport |
Miscellaneous |
Features |
Classifieds |
Employment |
Index |
Home | |
|
Copyrights © 2001 The Hindu Republication or redissemination of the contents of this screen are expressly prohibited without the written consent of The Hindu |
|