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Old January 17th, 2017 #1
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Post Rapeugees may be given voluntary work in Italy to make native Italians "understand" them (and make Italian traitors involved in the Rapeugee Industry very rich)

Under new plans the Government will also speed-up the expulsion of economic migrants as the country attempts to deal with a surge in new arrivals.

A government source, said: "It will be up to local mayors to decide what they do, and the work will probably be voluntary."

Migrants in several towns in Italy have already put rules in place to get migrants to clean up parks and streets.

Interior minister Marco Minniti will present the scheme to parliament tomorrow in which he will announce the unpaid work will be a precondition for gaining asylum.

Migrant centres have popped-up all over Italy in a bid to house just under 100,000 migrants, mostly from sub-Saharan Africa, who applied for asylum in the country between January and October last year.

The centres are suffering from serious overcrowding issues, while many train stations in upmarket Italian towns and on the country's borders have had tent villages built up around them as migrants attempt to claim asylum.

During the average seven-month wait for applications to be processed, migrants are allowed to work.

However, most opportunities are low paid, cash-in-hand agricultural work.

The sudden influx, partly prompted by the European Union (EU) sending Europe-bound migrants back to Turkey from Greece, has caused major tensions within Italian communities.

Residents in small villages have complained about Africans hanging out on street corners.

However, there is evidence of tensions easing when migrants are offered voluntary work.

Luca Menesini, mayor of Capannori in Tuscany, has organised teams of migrants to tidy up local parks.

He said: "It allows people to get to know the foreigners and understand they are not just people you see on street corners."

And the manager of one migrant holding centre got African refugees to help in mountainous areas of central Italy hit by earthquakes last summer.

Anti-migrant sentiment was felt strongly last month when a constitutional reform referendum forced Matteo Renzi's government fold.

Earlier this month 25 reception centre staff were barricaded inside as migrants cut off the electricity supply, started fires and blocked exits after a 25-year-old asylum seeker from the Ivory Coast died, allegedly of natural causes.

The day before, Italian police chief Franco Gabrielli drafted a document ordering officers to increase efforts to deport economic migrants over fears of terror in Europe.

The two-page directive revealed Italy is to open 16 detention centres for migrants to detain them until deportation can be arranged.

Mayors in northern Italy have also attempted to ban migrants from using free public wi-fi.

The numbers of migrants arriving in Italy increased rapidly after March last year when the Turkey-EU deal came into force.

But the figures are set to soar even higher this year, with 2,000 migrants rescued from the Mediterranean in the first two weeks of 2017.

Last year the record reached 181,000 but officials fear this will be easily beaten this

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read full article at source: http://www.express.co.uk/news/world/...-unpaid-asylum
 
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