immigration

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The next major piece of legislation for Italy was passed in 1998, and is known as the Turco-Napolitano law. This law specifically deals with illegal immigration, and the detainment of such immigrants. The law states that “…if an immigrant is found to be illegal, than they shall be brought before a magistrate, who will determine if they are allowed to stay or not” (CITATION NEEDED). This law was inherently flawed, because the immigrants were given a court date to appear before the magistrate, which was usually two weeks from the day they were caught. In these two weeks, it was found that the migrants were abusing the openness of the Schengen area, and leaving Italy never to be found. In 2002, an amendment to the law was passed which only gave the immigrants five days to appear before a judge, in which time they were held in containment centers.
These “containment centers”, or Centers of Temporary Stay, have received a fair amount of criticism from other countries and international agencies alike. These centers, which resemble jail cells, are small rooms where illegal immigrants await their deportation. Originally, the maximum stay in the CPT’s was only 30 days. It was later increased to 60 days for those seeking asylum. In 2008, Berlusconi decreed that the maximum amount of time that anyone was allowed to stay in the CPT’s was 180 days. He also renamed the CPT’s to Centers for Identification and Expulsion. In 2011, the new Italian government increased the time of detention to 18 months.
The detention centers where illegal immigrants are held are now being considered places where human rights abuses occur. Doctors for Human Rights visited the camps and reported, “These centers are places generating violence…they are useless place...

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... borders. One of the major perpetrators of profiling is Hungary. In Budapest, the government passed legislation that banned the playing of Romani music in public places, citing the music as a “defect” of the Romani culture (CITATION NEEDED). It is also common practice for the Romani children to be sent to delinquent schools, even if they have no criminal record and done nothing wrong. In addition to these schools, the children are also sometimes sent to schools for children with learning disabilities, even if they exhibit no signs of having a disability. While the government may not be the only entity to blame, they are certainly responsible, because their inaction on the issue has caused it to spiral out of control. It is the governments job to regulate immigration and migrants within a country, and Hungary’s inability to do so has drawn a fair amount of criticism.

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