Home
Archive
Newsletters
Video
Blogs
Discuss
About
Search
Donate
Advertise
  • AlterNetYour turn

Support AlterNet
Do you value the information you're getting from AlterNet? Please show your support with a tax-deductible donation.


Feedback
Tell us how we're doing.

Advertisement
Advertisement

New Italian Prime Minister A Blow To Immigrants

Posted by Rinku Sen, RaceWire at 11:57 AM on April 21, 2008.


What does this right wing bent do Italian politics foretell?
timelinepic3

Share and save this post:

      

      

Share on Facebook       

AlterNet Social Networks:
follow us on twitter
find us on Facebook

Got a tip for a post?:
Email us | Anonymous form

Get Immigration in your
mailbox!

 

Earlier this week, Italians re-elected Right Wing, plastic-faced media tycoon Silvio Berlusconi as their Prime Minister after the fall of the center-left Prodi government. This is not good news for Italy’s immigrants. Quite often I hear that the European Union with its no-borders political ethic is a good model for U.S. immigration policy. But people forget that Europe’s borders are only open internally and that Europe takes great pains to keep “undesirables” out of the continent altogether. Italy, with its long coastlines and its very short history of receiving immigrants, has clamped down on immigration to ingratiate itself with its European neighbors and to bolster a coherent cultural identity.

Like many countries in Europe with aging and shrinking populations, they’d like to keep immigrant labor but not immigrants themselves. For a while, before and after Berlusconi, the country began to see the inhumanity of that stance and started to create integration programs. In his last term, Berlusconi backed the notorious Bossi-Fini laws which punished immigrants by making legal status almost impossible to sustain– it banned family sponsorship, restricted migrants to 6 month stays if they’re unemployed, and criminalized undocumented people.

I was in Italy the week that the Prodi government collapsed reporting for my book on immigration (The Accidental American, September 2008, Berrett Koehler). When I interviewed Saida Mamdouh, whose brother Fekkak is a cofounder of the Restaurant Opportunities Center of New York, she whispered every time she said the word “clandestino” as though her walls were bugged. She hoped the law would change, but thought it was unlikely given the collapse of the left. “Now the Bossi-Fini ministers will come back,” said her husband. On the train from the airport in Rome, I met a 21-year-old Bangladeshi man whose story revealed the precarious legal status of most immigrants there. Javed had been in the country for 3 years, and unemployed for the last 3 months, in 3 more he’d be deportable. He told me that it often takes six months to get papers, and permission to stay is usually granted in one-year increments, and so, as soon as you get papers, you have to start again trying to get new papers.

The United States is taking the wrong lessons from the EU and Italy, sounding more and more like the Italian cabinet minister who said, “We do not want immigrants, except for the minimum number necessary for the requirements of our economy, for the minimum amount of time possible, and in times of absolute precariousness, so that it will be easy to free ourselves of them when we are ready.” But an immigration system based on denying people rights and protections while demanding their labor won’t work any better here than it does there.

Digg!

Tagged as: immigration, italy

Rinku Sen writes for Race Wire.


American Apparel Sticks Up for Immigrant Workers Swept Up in ICE Raids
Holiday sale will benefit those left jobless during the holidays.
Post by Marjorie Clifton. December 17, 2009.
Alleged Police Cover-Up Adds Shocking Angle to the Racist Murder of Luis Ramirez
Justice may yet come for Luis Ramirez.
Post by Joshua Holland. December 16, 2009.
Lunatic Phoenix Sheriff Joe Arpaio Issues New Order Forcing Inmates to Listen to Christmas Carols
His unconventional tactics are often unusually cruel and sometimes outright racist.
Post by Amanda Terkel. December 16, 2009.
Advertisement
You've chosen to turn comments off for the entire site. Would you like to turn them back on?