Italy - silvio berlusconi
Berlusconi cabinet toughens up on immigration
Wednesday 21 May 2008
Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi's government approved a new set of strict laws against illegal immigration on Wednesday at the first full session of the cabinet, held in Naples to focus on the garbage crisis. Alexis Masciarelli reports.
Wednesday 21 May 2008
By Reuters“Citizens have a fundamental right not to be afraid. The right not to be afraid is a right that a state worthy of the name must guarantee,” said 71-year-old Berlusconi, who won a third term promising to fight crime widely blamed on immigrants.
Honouring a campaign promise to hold his first full cabinet meeting in
Berlusconi approved a decree opening new landfills which will now be considered military zones, giving the army powers to stop local residents from blocking roads and railway lines in protest against unwanted rubbish tips in their neighbourhoods.
Some people in Naples, where waist-high piles of rubbish have been set on fire by locals fed up with local authorities’ inability to clear the streets, and the involvement of the local mafia or “Camorra”, were sceptical Berlusconi could help them.
“Coming to
Berlusconi also scrapped taxes on homes, overtime and productivity-related pay, and sought banks’ help to lower mortgage payments, in a bid to help the euro zone’s third largest economy avoid a looming recession.
EUROPEAN WARNINGS
Police evacuated one camp after people set fire to shacks over news reports of an apparent attempted kidnapping of a baby by a Roma girl. Similar reports of an attempted baby-snatching surfaced in
Interior Minister Roberto Maroni, from the anti-immigrant Northern League party allied to Berlusconi’s People of Freedom, told reporters after the cabinet meeting the new security laws would be rushed through parliament by the end of July.
They include making illegal immigration a jailable offence, which has outraged European human rights groups and politicians.
Property rented to illegal immigrants will be confiscated and it will be a jailable offence for adults to make children beg—a measure which appears to be aimed at Roma people, known in
The package makes it easier to expel illegal immigrants who fall foul of the law, check the income of immigrants from the EU and crack down on abuse of the asylum system to enter
Some measures were not aimed at immigrants, such as tougher laws for dealing with the mafia as well as for crimes targeting old people, women and the disabled and for drunk driving.
The Council of Europe’s Commissioner for Human Rights, Thomas Hammarberg, criticised the package, saying “arrests should be used against criminals, which immigrants are not”.
But Maroni said all the new measures respected EU norms.
“The accusations against us that have been made over the past few days are groundless,” he said.
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