Sections

1 of 8 migrants taken to Albania vulnerable, back to Italy

Health issues, will be taken to Brindisi on Libra

Redazione Ansa

(ANSA) - ROME, NOV 8 - One of eight migrants taken to Albania as the second batch of asylum seekers due to be processed at an Italian-run centre there has turned out to be vulnerable and will return to Italy, officials said Friday.
    The first batch were already returned to Italy after a Rome court ruled their countries of origin, Egypt and Bangladesh, were not wholly safe.
    This second batch is also from those two countries but the government is confident a court will not overturn a decree on safe countries passe by Giorgia Meloni's executive to forestall such challenges.
    The migrant was found to be vulnerable for some health issues, as happened with one of the previous batch, of whom another was discovered to be a minor and thus ineligible for the programme too.
    The migrant, of whom it is not known if he is Egyptian or Bangladeshi, will be taken back to Brindisi on board the Italian Navy ship that is collecting migrants - healthy adult males - for the Albania project.
    Meloni says the controversial scheme, which has spurred interest from the UK and Netherlands among others, will be a deterrent for migrants setting out for Italy and Europe.
    The Italian opposition says it creates a new Guantanamo and unacceptably externalises the migrant issue, while only addressing a drop in the ocean of arrivals each year.
    Calling it a propaganda stunt, they note that when up to full speed it will only process 3,000 migrants a year - when over 150,000 reached Italy last year, a number that has fallen sharply this year.
    European Commission President Urusla von der Leyen has called the project a model that could be emulated by other countries.
    British Prime Minister Keir Starmer, who binned the previous Tory government's migrants to Rwanda policy, has voiced especial interest in the Italy-Albania deal. (ANSA).
   

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