The Rome court handed the case to the EU Court to ensure Italian law complied with European legislation, with seven migrants previously sent to Albania returning to Italy, prompting criticism from Italian politicians.
Italy’s Former Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte lashed out at the government of incumbent Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni for allocating funds for a project eventually blocked by the Italian courts.
The Meloni government is very busy with a game of snakes and ladders worth almost a billion that brings hundreds of law enforcement officers who serve in cities in Albania, sending back and forth on expensive journeys about twenty migrants.
Conte pointed out that Italian businesses “struggle more than others in Europe on high bills,” as they faced higher energy costs. Whereas Meloni works on migration policy, the former prime minister draws attention to the cost-of-living crisis of Italians.
Minimum pensioners with 3 euros more per month; 4 out of 10 young people with salaries under 9 euros per hour; laid-off workers in the auto sector dreaming of a discount on the Maserati offered by Stellantis.
Meloni’s government focused on dialogues with third countries, as EU member states could not come to a common decision on accepting migrants. In September, Hungary said that if migrants started arriving in Budapest, the authorities would send them to Brussels on buses.