Home
/
Isiam
/
Politics & Economics
/
Migrants to Italy face 'a kind of slavery'
Migrants to Italy face 'a kind of slavery'
Nov 17, 2024 2:18 PM

  Thousands of migrants are being lured to Italy with false promises of work and forced to live in conditions akin to slavery, the International Organization for Migration (IOM) said Tuesday.

  In a study of a migrant camp near the town of San Nicola Varco, 100 km (63 miles) south of Naples, IOM officials found some 1,200 migrants squatting in abandoned buildings without water and electricity, eking a living among piles of rubbish.

  The young men, most of them from Morocco, were being paid between 15 and 25 euros ($21 and $35) for a 12-hour day laboring in nearby greenhouses and fields, without work contracts. Their employers often charged them for basics like transport and water, in the sweltering summer temperatures of southern Italy.

  "The humanitarian emergency has become serious because they are living in conditions that are unsustainable," said Flavio Di Giacomo, spokesman for the IOM in Italy. "The salaries are well below the minimum. It is a kind of slavery."

  Di Giacomo said that San Nicola Varco is one of the largest migrant settlements, but there are many more across southern Italy and even in the more prosperous north.

  "We're talking about many thousands of immigrants in total."

  Many of the migrants had paid up to 8,000 euros per person to a middle-man in their home country for the promise of a seasonal contract in Italy, the OIM said.

  "Once in Italy, the migrants found that their employer had disappeared or just refused to employ them. Without a legal work permit, many fell into exploitation," said Peter Schatzer, regional representative for the IOM in Rome.

  Each year, Italy sets a quota for the number of migrant workers allowed to enter the country as seasonal workers for its large agricultural sector.

  The IOM said illegal labor, especially in the agricultural sector, is a widespread phenomenon in Italy with official statistics showing it accounts for between 15.9 percent and 17.6 percent of gross domestic product.

  Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi was elected by a landslide last year with a mandate to crack down on illegal immigration and rising crime, which many Italians blame on immigrants.

  His government has clashed with the UN refugee agency UNHCR over a deal which allows Italy to return to Libya boats of would-be illegal migrants intercepted in the Mediterranean.

  PHOTO CAPTION

  Migrants stand behind the main gate of a holding center on the Italian island of Lampedusa, September 4, 2008.

  Source: Reuters

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
Politics & Economics
Satellite images show destruction in Eastern Ghouta
  According to UN analysis, regime bombardment has levelled residential areas, infrastructure and businesses.   The UN has released satellite imagery from areas inside Eastern Ghouta, showing the destruction continuous regime bombardment has caused.   The Damascus suburb has been targeted by the continuous air attacks since the Syrian regime, aided by Russia,...
Syria: Post-war reconstruction booming in Jarablus
  Jarablus, a city in northern Syria near the Turkish border, is one of the few places to rebound after fighters from ISIL were defeated with help from Turkey.   More than six years of war in Syria means it will take massive reconstruction efforts to rebuild cities that have been reduced...
How Mossad carries out assassinations
  The killing of 35-year-old Palestinian scientist Fadi al-Batsh in the Malaysian capital Kuala Lumpur has taken the wraps off a covert programme of targeted killings of Palestinians deemed a threat by Israel.   Al-Batsh studied electrical engineering in Gaza before going on to earn a PhD in the same subject in...
Relatives raise concern over 'missing' Russian citizens in Egypt
  Relatives of as many as 18 Russian citizens, including eight children, have expressed concern about the wellbeing of their Egypt-based family members, saying they are unable to establish their whereabouts after they were taken away by suspected secret police officers.   According to the relatives, Sakinat Baisultanova - a 31-year-old divorced...
Yemenis resort to burning firewood and rubbish to cook food
  When Yahia al-Amari's three gas cylinders ran dry, he scoured the entire Yemeni capital to find a place where he could refill them.   The 50-year-old walked to nearly every petrol station in Sanaa last month, hoping to find enough fuel to cook his family of seven their first hot meal...
Double trouble in India: Religious bigotry coupled with coronavirus
  By: Ravale Mohydin   As Italian philosopher, Giacomo Leopardi once observed, “no human trait deserves less tolerance in everyday life, and gets less, than intolerance.”   This adage perfectly encapsulates India’s ruling Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) led by Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s response to the coronavirus pandemic so far.   As the disease...
US blocked inquiry into Israeli violence: UN official
  The U.S. declined calls from the UN Security Council for an investigation into violence on the Israeli-Gaza border that left 18 Palestinians dead, a UN official said Monday.   Speaking at a press conference at UN headquarters, Gustavo Meza-Cuadra, Permanent Representative of Peru to the UN and president of the Security...
How to prevent outbreaks of zoonotic diseases like COVID-19
  by Maxwell Gomera   ·   By now billions of people around the world are following advice to practise social distancing and "shelter at home" to prevent the alarming spread of a new coronavirus disease, COVID-19. The virus joins a growing list of emerging zoonotic diseases or diseases caused by bacteria, viruses,...
ASEAN summit silence on Rohingya 'an absolute travesty'
  After two days of ceremonious meetings, Southeast Asian leaders missed the bullseye in talks about two major human rights issues affecting their region: Myanmar's handling of the Rohingya crisis and the Philippines' bloody campaign against illegal drug traffickers.   Philippines President Rodrigo Duterte, this year's Chairman of the Association of Southeast...
Turkish aid campaigns open doors worldwide
  Turkish aid campaigns worldwide will open new doors in political, commercial, and diplomatic ties, as well as human affairs, according to the head of Turkey's Disaster and Emergency Management Authority (AFAD).   Speaking to Anadolu Agency in the Mediterranean resort of Antalya, Mehmet Gulluoglu said that his agency is operating hand-in-hand...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2024 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved