Meloni praises Sunak’s immigration policies on
visit to No 10
Far-right Italian prime minister in London for ‘new
beginning’ aiming at deeper and wider alliance between the countries
Patrick
Wintour Diplomatic editor
Thu 27 Apr
2023 18.34 BST
The Italian
prime minister, Giorgia Meloni, has praised the work undertaken by her British
counterpart, Rishi Sunak, to fight people traffickers and clandestine
immigration networks, as two of the most prominent rightwing leaders in Europe
met in Downing Street.
At the
start of a two-day visit designed to deepen relations between the two
governments, Meloni was greeted outside Downing Street by a small group of
demonstrators carrying placards reading “stand up to racism” and “no to fascist
Meloni”.
She said
the meeting with Sunak marked “a new beginning” in relations between Italy and
Britain.
“I am very
happy to be here, and I am convinced that we can do a good job together,” she
said. She underlined that she “absolutely agrees” with the work Sunak was doing
to counter “the fight against traffickers and clandestine immigration”.
Sunak was
due to give Meloni a tour of Westminster Abbey before the coronation of Charles
on 6 May. Alongside Poland, Italy represents probably the UK’s best opportunity
to influence the direction of the European Union from outside.
Meloni, who
leads the far-right Brothers of Italy party, has sought to distance herself
from her own semi-fascist political roots. This week, as Italy marked the
anniversary of its liberation from fascism, she told a ceremony in Rome: “For
many years, rightwing political parties in parliament have declared their
incompatibility with any nostalgia for fascism.”
But she is
dogged by members of her government who stray towards just such nostalgia.
Among those taking part in Tuesday’s ceremony was Ignazio La Russa, a collector
of fascist memorabilia as well as speaker of the Senate, Italy’s second highest
office of state. “There is no reference to anti-fascism in the Italian
constitution,” he was quoted as saying.
His
comments sparked a barrage of criticism from the centre-left, and calls for him
to resign. The Democratic party leader Elly Schlein reacted by insisting that
“anti-fascism is our constitution”.
Meloni’s
brother-in-law Francesco Lollobrigida said: “We cannot surrender to the idea of
ethnic substitution,” which he defined as “Italians are having fewer children,
we replace them with someone else”. “That is not the way forward,” he said.
The Italian
government is considering how to tackle a long-running decline in the national
birthrate. Its natality rate is among the lowest in Europe.
In office
since October, Meloni’s governmnet has pledged to curb mass immigration, mainly
from north Africa. However, more than 35,085 people have arrived in Italy so
far in 2023, interior ministry data shows, up from about 7,900 in the same
period last year.
The
majority of new arrivals came from Ivory Coast, Guinea, Pakistan, Egypt,
Tunisia and Bangladesh. Meloni has urged the EU to recognise the need for “a
single European policy on refugees which provides for support outside the EU
borders for those affected by wars and calamities”.
The UK will
want to focus on shared defence perspectives and the war in Ukraine, on which
Meloni has emerged as a surprisingly staunch supporter of the battle to drive
Russian forces from its country.
As Meloni
arrived in the UK, leading members of her government were staging a
reconstruction conference with senior Ukrainian politicians in Rome. Meloni has
herself travelled to Kyiv and is keen to make sure that the G7 heads of
government summit in Japan shortly sends out a strong message of solidarity.
Meloni’s
defence minister, Guido Crosetto, said Italy aimed to reach the defence
spending target of 2% of GDP set down by Nato. Italy’s current total is 1.51%.
In a sign
of the convergence between the two countries, the UK foreign secretary, James
Cleverly; the defence secretary, Ben Wallace; and the trade secretary, Kemi
Badenoch, travelled to Rome on 8 and 9 February. Italy and the UK are committed
to a multibillion-dollar strategic design of the sixth-generation Tempest
military fighter, together with the Japanese.
Italy is
currently embroiled in a row over the EU decision to appoint Luigi Di Maio, the
former foreign minister and leader of the Five Star Movement, as EU special
envoy to the Gulf, a decision that the Italian coalition government said it was
not consulted about. The appointment, a critical one as relations between Saudi
Arabia and Iran thaw, was made personally by the EU high representative for
foreign affairs and security policy, Josep Borrell.
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