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Aktualitet2025-04-14 22:51:00

Chaos in Gjadri camp/ 20 migrants destroy rooms, 3 stab themselves

Shkruar nga Pamfleti

Chaos in Gjadri camp/ 20 migrants destroy rooms, 3 stab themselves

In an attempt to commit an extreme act, three of the immigrants involved reportedly inflicted knife wounds on themselves, requiring the intervention of medical personnel...

Violence erupts in the migrant camp in Gjadër (Lezha).

Moments of extreme tension at the center set up by the Italian government in Gjadra, where 40 foreign citizens repatriated from Italy following deportation decrees were received.

According to Tg4, around 20 migrants started the violent protest, damaging the center's furniture and infrastructure and causing chaos.

Broken windows, destroyed mattresses, and looted homes are just some of the signs left by immigrant violence.

In an attempt to commit an extreme act, three of the migrants involved reportedly inflicted knife wounds on themselves, requiring medical attention. Fortunately, none of the injuries were serious. Meanwhile, one of the migrants whose deportation order was overturned has now returned to Italy.

The point is that these immigrants were not “ordinary” immigrants. This is how Italian Interior Minister Matteo Piantedosi explained it, noting that these were people accused or convicted of particularly serious crimes, including attempted murder, sexual violence, serious injuries, child pornography, theft, robbery, incitement of minors and possession of narcotics.

The migrant center in Gjadra is functioning as a CPR, initially housing 40 migrants who were refused asylum in Italy and will be repatriated to their countries of origin.

The Italian government has not made their nationalities or other details public. Both facilities in Shëngjin and Gjadra were originally built to process asylum claims from people rescued in the Mediterranean Sea by Italy. But since their inauguration in October, Italian courts have banned authorities from using them, and small groups of migrants sent there have been returned to Italy. 

The Italian government of Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni, led by the far-right, approved a decree last month that changed the use of Albanian rapid asylum processing centers to include holding asylum seekers rejected with deportation orders.

It is not clear how long migrants could be held in Albania. In Italy they could be detained for up to 18 months pending deportation. Meloni’s new approach to deporting migrants echoes US President Donald Trump’s recent deportations of migrants of various nationalities to Panama. It is also in line with a recent EU Commission proposal that, if approved, would allow EU member states to set up so-called “return hubs” abroad. /Adapted Pamphlet/

 

 

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