In the name of the same racist management and detention spirit, the new law stipulates that a resident’s identity is not verifiable, they may be transferred to a Detention Center for Repatriation for up to 90 days, to which 30 days may added. So, among the reasons why one can detained in Detention Center for Repatriation, one can add the case of waiting for a response to the application for international protection. To avoid detention, any asylum seeker must now prove that they can have 4538 euros available which to “buy” the state a life outside the Detention Center for Repatriation.
The structure of this decree converted into law already falters in the first months, with the first ruling to the contrary pronounced at the end of September 2023: a judge of the court of Catania does not validate the detention of 4 people in the hotspot of Pozzallo (Ragusa) (3). A second ruling to this effect comes on October 8, again from a judge in Catania, again concerning the detention of 6 people in the same Pozzallo hotspot, which is not validated. In any case, the structure of the law shows that it wants to translate in writing the evidence of the border as ubiquitous throughout Europe, enshrining in black and white that every detention, deportation and control post must be treated, in fact, as a border. The government is now analyzing appeals filed by judges, considering them mere bureaucracy (4). The legal text of the Cutro Decree remains standing and enforced.
THE LAMPEDUSA “CRISIS”: THE SOUTHERN DECREE AND SUBSEQUENT MEASURES
Still on the media wave generated after a series of landings of several thousand people in Lampedusa in the past two months, the Government passed two more decrees on the migration issue in September 2023.
The first decree concerns regulations on the housing and detention of migrants; it threaded into a Decree concerning the Mezzogiorno. There are two central points: the extension of detention time pending deportation and the ownership of detention facilities.
- Migrantsconsideredirregularandsubjecttoadeportationdecreecouldnowbe detained up to a maximum of 18 months, with 3-month extensions validated by the judge at the request of the Questore.
- BothCentersofPermanenceforRepatriationandHotspotsandCASsare transformed into “works intended for national defence for certain purposes.”
The Government, thanks to the assignment given to Defense and the reclassification of facilities, bypasses consultation with regions and municipalities in identifying the facilities. The Ministry of Defense is in charge of their design and implementation.
The Government has established a fund of 20 million euros for 2023: expenditure of 400,000 euros authorized for 2023 and one million euros in 2024.
Management of the facilities will be entrusted to private individuals, as is currently provided for Permanence Centers, while supervision will remain in the hands of the police force. Procedures for construction work are declared “Extraordinary,” so the MoD can order the immediate procurement of services and supplies as an exception to procedures (as in cases of earthquake or flood).
The number of centres will have deemed “suitable” and may increase over time. Existing buildings, probably former barracks, will also be converted. The armed forces will thus be primarily the operational arm that will allow for cuts in procedures, time, and costs.
In practice, the government is equipping itself with the tools to quickly and extensively set up a series of new prisons for undocumented people, where they will be locked up for a year and a half while awaiting deportation (the idea is one Permanence Center per region).
Yet another decree is then approved three days after the first one. The structure of the new immigration and “security” squeeze (included in yet another 11-article decree-law) provides an additional category of individuals at risk of deportation, i.e. people with long-