Italy sends first asylum seekers to Albania under controversial deal
Al Jazeera
Rome boasts of deal processing asylum seekers outside EU. Critics complain of ‘cruel experiment’ that undermines human rights.
An Italian navy ship has docked in Albania to deliver refugees and migrants, the first such mission under a controversial deal between the two countries that sends asylum seekers outside the European Union while their claims are processed.
The ship, carrying 16 men who were picked up in Italian waters, arrived at Shengjin port on Wednesday. The arrangement has been heralded by Italy’s right-wing government as unprecedented and eyed by other EU states seeking to tighten immigration policies, but rights groups have slammed it as undermining human rights.
Ten men from Bangladesh and six from Egypt disembarked from the ship. They are the first arrivals under the deal, which was agreed by Italy and Albania in November.
The naval ship Libra left the port of Lampedusa on Monday. The refugees were rescued at sea after departing from Libya last week, according to officials.
On arrival in Albania, they were escorted towards the gates of a processing centre a few metres from the vessel. Their cases will be heard at a nearby airbase in Gjader, which can hold 3,000 people.