Rome – The highest court of Italian appeal ordered the government to compensate a group of migrants who were blocked at sea for days on a coastal guard ship in 2018 due to the difficult anti-migration policies of the Minister of the Interior, Matteo Salvini.
Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni criticized the court as “questionable” and “frustrating” on Friday on Friday.
The decision of the Court of Cassation, which cancels a previous one, ordered the Italian government to pay the damages inflicted on migrants at the time of dead end. Judges Thursday referred the case to an ordinary court, asking it to define the exact amount of the compensation to be granted.
A group of Eritrean migrants called on the Court of Cassation with regard to the 190 migrant test by the Diciotti Coast Guard ship in August 2018. Thirteen migrants with health problems were first landed on the island Lampedusa off the tip of southern Italy. The ship then went to Catania in Sicily, but was blocked for about 10 days by the orders of Salvini, before the remaining 177 migrants were authorized.
Meloni, who directs a conservative coalition, including the head of the Ligue de la Duree and vice-president Salvini, said that the decision would not help “citizens get closer to institutions”.
“Because of this decision, the government will have to pay compensation – using money from honest Italian citizens who pay taxes – to people who have tried to enter Italy illegally, violating Italian law,” she wrote in an article on social networks.
Salvini, in a separate position, called the “absurd” decision, urging magistrates to use their own money if they really want to compensate for their “beloved migrants”. He always said that his work was to defend the borders of Italy.
It was the last chapter of a several -month confrontation between the Italian magistrates and the government of Meloni, which tries to advance a radical reform of the judicial system. Many criticisms say that this puts the independence of the judiciary in danger.
Italian courts also challenged the flagship initiative of Meloni to transfer migrants to expensive reception centers built in Albania for accelerated treatment.
(Tagstranslate) Military and Defense (T) Government Politics (T) Politics (T) Immigration (T) Courts (T) World News (T) General News (T) Article (T) 119553299
Rome – The highest court of Italian appeal ordered the government to compensate a group of migrants who were blocked at sea for days on a coastal guard ship in 2018 due to the difficult anti-migration policies of the Minister of the Interior, Matteo Salvini.
Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni criticized the court as “questionable” and “frustrating” on Friday on Friday.
The decision of the Court of Cassation, which cancels a previous one, ordered the Italian government to pay the damages inflicted on migrants at the time of dead end. Judges Thursday referred the case to an ordinary court, asking it to define the exact amount of the compensation to be granted.
A group of Eritrean migrants called on the Court of Cassation with regard to the 190 migrant test by the Diciotti Coast Guard ship in August 2018. Thirteen migrants with health problems were first landed on the island Lampedusa off the tip of southern Italy. The ship then went to Catania in Sicily, but was blocked for about 10 days by the orders of Salvini, before the remaining 177 migrants were authorized.
Meloni, who directs a conservative coalition, including the head of the Ligue de la Duree and vice-president Salvini, said that the decision would not help “citizens get closer to institutions”.
“Because of this decision, the government will have to pay compensation – using money from honest Italian citizens who pay taxes – to people who have tried to enter Italy illegally, violating Italian law,” she wrote in an article on social networks.
Salvini, in a separate position, called the “absurd” decision, urging magistrates to use their own money if they really want to compensate for their “beloved migrants”. He always said that his work was to defend the borders of Italy.
It was the last chapter of a several -month confrontation between the Italian magistrates and the government of Meloni, which tries to advance a radical reform of the judicial system. Many criticisms say that this puts the independence of the judiciary in danger.
Italian courts also challenged the flagship initiative of Meloni to transfer migrants to expensive reception centers built in Albania for accelerated treatment.
(Tagstranslate) Military and Defense (T) Government Politics (T) Politics (T) Immigration (T) Courts (T) World News (T) General News (T) Article (T) 119553299
Rome – The highest court of Italian appeal ordered the government to compensate a group of migrants who were blocked at sea for days on a coastal guard ship in 2018 due to the difficult anti-migration policies of the Minister of the Interior, Matteo Salvini.
Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni criticized the court as “questionable” and “frustrating” on Friday on Friday.
The decision of the Court of Cassation, which cancels a previous one, ordered the Italian government to pay the damages inflicted on migrants at the time of dead end. Judges Thursday referred the case to an ordinary court, asking it to define the exact amount of the compensation to be granted.
A group of Eritrean migrants called on the Court of Cassation with regard to the 190 migrant test by the Diciotti Coast Guard ship in August 2018. Thirteen migrants with health problems were first landed on the island Lampedusa off the tip of southern Italy. The ship then went to Catania in Sicily, but was blocked for about 10 days by the orders of Salvini, before the remaining 177 migrants were authorized.
Meloni, who directs a conservative coalition, including the head of the Ligue de la Duree and vice-president Salvini, said that the decision would not help “citizens get closer to institutions”.
“Because of this decision, the government will have to pay compensation – using money from honest Italian citizens who pay taxes – to people who have tried to enter Italy illegally, violating Italian law,” she wrote in an article on social networks.
Salvini, in a separate position, called the “absurd” decision, urging magistrates to use their own money if they really want to compensate for their “beloved migrants”. He always said that his work was to defend the borders of Italy.
It was the last chapter of a several -month confrontation between the Italian magistrates and the government of Meloni, which tries to advance a radical reform of the judicial system. Many criticisms say that this puts the independence of the judiciary in danger.
Italian courts also challenged the flagship initiative of Meloni to transfer migrants to expensive reception centers built in Albania for accelerated treatment.
(Tagstranslate) Military and Defense (T) Government Politics (T) Politics (T) Immigration (T) Courts (T) World News (T) General News (T) Article (T) 119553299