The Italian navy's ship Libra
with the first 16 migrants to be processed in new Italian-run
centres Albania arrived in the port of Shengjin early on
Wednesday, ANSA sources said.
The migrants, 10 Bangladeshis and six Egyptians, are the first
to test the innovative and controversial scheme that has been
criticised by rights groups and the political opposition but
hailed by European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen as
a model for others to follow.
The 16 adult males, intercepted in international waters south of
Lampedusa, are to undergo accelerated border procedures.
They will first be identified and undergo health screening.
They will be transferred to the other 'Italian' site in Gjader,
about 20 kilometers inland, where they will await the outcome of
their request for international protection in the center for
asylum seekers.
The Albanian centres, which were initially supposed to have
opened in May but were held up by construction and procedural
delays, are the result of an agreement between Italian Premier
Giorgia Meloni and Albanian Prime Minister Edi Rama.
"Italy has set a good example by signing the Italy-Albania
Protocol to process asylum requests in Albanian territory, but
under Italian and European jurisdiction," Meloni told the Senate
on Tuesday as she reported to parliament before this week's EU
summit.
"The two structures envisaged by the Protocol - the Shengjin
center and the Gjader one - are now ready and operational.
"We took some extra time to get everything done in the best
possible way, but we are very satisfied with the results of this
work.
"It is a new, courageous, unprecedented path, but one which
perfectly reflects the European spirit and which has everything
necessary to be followed with other non-EU nations too.
"And I also thank Prime Minister Rama and his entire government
for believing in the quality and effectiveness of this
initiative".
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED © Copyright ANSA