Meloni’s
Albanian migrant detention centers are now ghost towns
The
much-touted solution to Europe’s migration crisis houses only Italian police —
who have taken to adopting stray dogs and sunbathing.
January 2,
2025 4:00 am CET
By Elena
Giordano and Una Hajdari
https://www.politico.eu/article/giorgia-meloni-italy-albania-migrant-detention-centers-ghost-towns/
When Italian
Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni unveiled her flagship plan to intercept, detain
and process asylum-seekers in Albania, it was presented as a grand answer to
Europe’s migration crisis.
But one year
and €67.5 million later, the scheme is stuck in judicial limbo with no
possibility for processing asylum-seekers, empty buildings that are already
falling apart, and Italian personnel returning home.
“It looked
like a ghost town,” Volt Europe co-President Francesca Romana D’Antuono, who
visited the detention center in Gjadër in late November and took part in
protests against the camp with local activists, told POLITICO.
“But then,
when we entered, there was quite some police,” she added. “The point is that
they do nothing all day, because there’s really nothing to do.”
According to
D’Antuono, the senior police officer who accompanied them on the visit was
displeased with their questioning of the staff. “I think they feel the
absurdity of it all,” she said.
In October,
the first 16 migrants — from Bangladesh and Egypt — arrived at the centers on
an Italian warship. But within seven days all 16 were returned to Italy after
immigration judges with the Rome tribunal nixed the scheme.
In late
November, part of the Italian staff employed by Medihospes, the company
managing operations at the centers, started returning to Italy.
Sources at
the Italian embassy told POLITICO that despite staff reductions last month, all
stations remain fully staffed — complete with round-the-clock police shifts —
in case a surprise wave of refugees rolls in.
The project
foresees a reception and sorting center in Shëngjin, where refugees captured by
the Italian coast guard are first brought, their personal data is processed and
they are offered initial health care services. The second part of the
operation, a detention camp in Gjadër, is found inland around 8 kilometers from
the regional city of Lezhë.
Shëngjin
also served as a holding hub for Afghan refugees, particularly after the
Taliban returned to power in Afghanistan in August 2021. Despite its role as a
temporary shelter, many refugees remained stuck there for nearly two years,
awaiting a green light to move to the United States.
Sandër
Marashi, head of the port at Shëngjin, said although no migrants have arrived
for weeks, “the entire Italian staff is still at the port and at the center,
and they manage everything here.”
Locals in
the resort town of Shëngjin say the police spend their days lounging at the
five-star Rafaelo Resort, basking in the sun and feasting on seafood while
their unmistakable Carabinieri police cars sit parked out front.
Albanian
media report that the staff at Gjadër — marooned in a mountainside village with
just a few hundred locals for company — are isolated, bored and increasingly
resentful of their Shëngjin colleagues, who they claim are soaking up the good
life.
According to
a story published in the internal magazine of the Italian penitentiary police,
with no refugees in sight, the local prison officers at Gjadër have taken to
rescuing and entertaining the village’s stray dogs instead.
‘A very
expensive waiting room’
In April,
the Italian government allocated €65 million for the construction of the two
centers and another €2.5 million for the expenses of the Italian staff in 2024.
Overall, the government estimated it would spend around €680 million over the
next five years on maintaining and running the centers.
Meanwhile,
the Italian government awaits a decision from the Court of Justice of the
European Union, due this spring, on whether processing migrants in a third
country is in line with EU law.
“It’s just a
very expensive waiting room,” Volt European Parliament Member Anna Strolenberg,
who visited the center in Gjadër with D’Antuono, told POLITICO.
Nevertheless,
the Italian police employed in Albania to so little effect received a
significant pay bump. While the average pay of an officer is less than €2,000
in Italy, those stationed in Albania can earn up to €6,000.
An Albanian
television show secretly recorded a group of Italian police officers at the
Shëngjin center admitting they spent most of their time in the hotel’s sauna,
as they had nothing else to do.
Strolenberg
argued that Meloni’s plan for processing centers in Albania was unrealistic
from the outset. “Italy returns in total per year around 3,000 people or fewer,
and in Albania they wanted to process around 3,000 people per month,” she said.
The
facilities are already starting to fall apart, the MEP added.
“In the
hospital, you could already see the water dripping from the walls,” she said.
“And on the ground, the water wouldn’t go away.” She added it was difficult to
imagine how the facility will fare when it becomes populated.
Failed model
or political victory?
Since the
inauguration of the two centers on Oct. 11 the project has received accolades
from European leaders including European Commission President Ursula von der
Leyen and British Prime Minister Keir Starmer, both of whom expressed interest
in replicating the approach elsewhere.
Von der
Leyen praised the project and called it “an innovative solution,” asking other
EU leaders to draw “lessons from the Italy-Albania protocol.”
Ahead of the
last European summit in late October, Meloni led an informal meeting on
“migration and innovative solutions” to recruit other EU leaders “interested in
the migration issue.”
But
Strolenberg says that by opening the centers Meloni has only given false hope
to both European leaders and EU residents.
“Other
politicians in Europe look at this deal and hope that it will succeed, that it
can be a blueprint for other things,” she said, arguing that talks on migration
will become “even more polarized” as a result.
Both
Strolenberg and D’Antuono argued that even if the project fails, it won’t be a
political defeat for Meloni.
“The
narrative now in Italy is that if the project is not happening, it’s not
because it’s not a good idea, but because there are communist judges that are
ruining everything,” said D’Antuono, emphasizing the attacks from Meloni and
her political allies directed at what they claim is a progressive-leaning
judiciary.
“It will
still look like at least she [Meloni] did the best she could,” Strolenberg
said.
Meanwhile,
attention is also now focusing on institutions like the Court of Justice of the
EU, whose ruling allowed the Rome tribunal to demand that the handful of
refugees sent to Albania since October be returned to Italy.
“The
European Parliament is shifting to the right. European governments are shifting
to the right. How long will the judiciary power hold? I don’t believe it will
hold much longer, because laws also evolve with the political powers,”
D’Antuono said.
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