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CIE - Extension of Detention Period Rejected

The House has decided that art. 5 of the legislative decree providing for the extension of time of detention to six months be deleted

There has been a new CPT setback. During the debate on Bill 733 (the one containing among other things the abolition of the ban on reporting by doctors) the Senate had already eliminated the provision extending the period of detention of irregular migrants to one year and six months in detention centres.

But the Ministry of the Interior, unable retreat on the government of migration by imprisonment (supposedly pending deportation) had re-proposed a similar rule within the so-called "anti-rape" decree a rule extending detention to six months. This was not only in the case of obstruction to identification (as required by the much disputed European Returns Directive) but simply in the case of difficulties (perhaps bureaucratic and attributable to the authorities in the countries of origin) in determining the nationality of migrants awaiting expulsion.

The fate of the bill, which has to be ratified by Parliament within 60 days of enactment) in terms of the part relating to the CIE centres, however, has been affected by a UDC and PD amendment that has removed Article 5. This was supported by some of majority in a secret ballot. This is a slap in the face for the Northern League which is staking its legitimacy on immigration.

Anything is possible and the decree still stands, pending the next votes in the Senate. Meanwhile, however, a window of possibility has opened in the reality of a crisis that is shaking the monolithic foundations of political representation, incapable of finding adequate responses to the current scenario. The answers are confused, and range from the belligerent statements of Minister Maroni (remember his call to be "bad towards illegal immigrants") to the stupefying statements of Fini, the chairman of the House (what tolerance, we need integration ...), to the bonapartist remarks of the President of the Council who though intent on hitting the "people’s belly" was nevertheless wise enough to soften the thorniest controversies. Anyone who wants to look at this scene through classical political eyes risks insanity. Those who try to do so with ideology risk finding themselves in a fantastic vision.

The harsh reality is one which simultaneously unites the most vulgar racism, that would like to blame the crisis on migrants, with the hundreds of signatures collected by the parliamentary majority against denouncing irregular immigrants – a new bucket of worms. To those who think that the vote in the House against Article 5 of the decree signals the ability to respond to racism with opposition votes is short sighted and confused. What is at stake is not the ability to vote or to make a decision on this or that measure, but the strength to decide.

There is something new that needs to find new institutions and new decision making moments. The networks of solidarity, those of doctors against denunciation, the self-organized migrant networks, can speak to a country where the crisis has broken every inhibition against xenophobia.

The answer to racism in a crisis can only come from the multitude. It is not that of the immigration experts and not that of the isolated immigrants, but that of a society that knows how to recover from the ground up what this so badly governed world has taken away; the ability to decide about its own future.

N. Grigion, Progetto Melting Pot Europa

See also:
-  The Road to Lampedusa – The Hell is now lasting 6 months

Translated by Chris. B.

[ Wednesday 15 April 2009 ]

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