http://europesworld.org/2015/10/26/how-italy-is-still-struggling-with-the-refugee-crisis/
The Arab spring marked for Italy the
start of a migration emergency that has since been worsened by developments in
Syria and Iraq, and most of all in Libya. Hundreds of thousands of people have
been leaving Libya by sea to reach Italy, and of these several thousands have
lost their lives.
The Italian island of Lampedusa is
the closest part of Europe to Africa, and while agreements with the Qaddafi regime
had greatly limited the number of migrants reaching it, the overthrown of Qaddafi
in 2011 has since seen a proliferation of human trafficking from Libya.
Italy initially dealt with the problem
as a seasonal emergency since the crossings are mainly undertaken in the summer
months. It was nevertheless unable to organise efficient procedures for the treatment,
identification and checking of asylum requests, or for the rejection of
so-called economic migrants.
No less than four different Italian
governments opted for different approaches: some blamed the EU for its
inefficiency and failure to respond to Italy’s calls for assistance, and others
looked for buffer solutions while trying to convince their EU partners that the
migrant crisis was not just a passing phenomenon but a structural fact.
Meanwhile, other EU countries blame
Italy for having disregarded existing agreements concerning economic migrants who
should be returned to their own country, and asylum seekers who need to be
assessed by the EU country they entered.
Italy’s inability to do this quickly
has encouraged migrants to quit Italian refugee centres and head for their real
destinations in France, Germany or Sweden. This has generated border tensions, especially
with France.
The drowning tragedies that shocked public
opinion in Italy saw the launch in autumn 2013 of the Mare Nostrum patrol mission
in Libyan territorial waters to rescue migrants aboard unsafe ships. A year
later, Mare Nostrum was replaced by the European Triton mission as part of the
Frontex programme for securing the EU’s external borders.
Now, the Italian
argument that all this is an European issue, not a national one, has been
reinforced by the much greater number of migrants reaching not only Italy but
also Greece. The result has been the European Commission’s plan for sharing the
burden among all 28 EU states. But Italy, like others, still needs to manage
immigration not just as an emergency but as a structural reality. And it also needs
to accept the idea that immigration, even the economic kind, can be a
development opportunity for countries with an ageing and shrinking population.
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