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Europe is trying to cut back migration. Can it find a legal way to do it?

Italy’s new migrant-processing centers in Albania had barely opened this week, accepting just 16 young men from Egypt and Bangladesh last Wednesday, before their futures were thrown into doubt.

First, it was determined within hours of their arrival that four of them should be brought to Italy on the grounds that they were either minors or “vulnerable.” Then, on Friday, a special immigration court in Rome ruled that the remaining 12 migrants cannot be sent back to Bangladesh or Egypt because they are not safe countries.

Why We Wrote This

European countries such as Italy are trying to reduce immigration by moving asylum-seekers’ processing offshore – in Italy’s case, to Albania. But while the approach is increasingly popular, its legality remains suspect.

The outcome highlights the difficulties facing Europe’s increasingly popular anti-immigration governments as they search for solutions that don’t run afoul of European laws, which include expansive protections of vulnerable migrants.

Italy last year bore the brunt of irregular immigration into Europe, and Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni came to power on promises to stop smugglers from bringing people into the European Union. The deal with Albania was endorsed by European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen as an example of “out-of-box thinking.”

“Many member states want to pursue a similar model,” says Hanne Beirens, director of the Migration Policy Institute Europe. “The question is not whether the political interest will be maintained, but whether it will be feasible to implement.”

Surprised by an unexpected court ruling, Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni is fighting for the survival of her newly inaugurated migrant-processing centers in Albania. Widely hailed as a model by European politicians pushing a tougher line on migration, the project has endured an inauspicious launch.

The first batch of 16 migrants, young men from Egypt and Bangladesh, arrived last Wednesday. Within hours, it was decided that four of them should be brought to Italy on the grounds that they were either minors or “vulnerable,” physically or mentally.

Then, on Friday, the special immigration unit of a court in Rome threw a major wrench in the works of the five-year €670 million ($724 million) plan to process Italian asylum applications offshore. It ruled that the remaining 12 migrants cannot be sent back to Bangladesh or Egypt because they are not safe countries.

Why We Wrote This

European countries such as Italy are trying to reduce immigration by moving asylum-seekers’ processing offshore – in Italy’s case, to Albania. But while the approach is increasingly popular, its legality remains suspect.

The Italian government is furious. “Politicized judges have decided that there are no safe countries of origin: it is impossible to detain those who enter illegally, it is forbidden to repatriate illegal immigrants,” Ms. Meloni’s hard-right party, Brothers of Italy, posted on the social platform X. “They want to abolish Italy’s borders. We will not let them.”

Italy’s deal to process asylum applications in Albania has sparked considerable interest among European policymakers. Since the crisis of 2015-16, migration has become a hot-button issue across the European Union, reshaping domestic politics and fueling division. In Italy, it empowered a strong right-wing government that now sets the bloc’s tone on migration.

“If skeptical views regarding migration and more open borders continue to gain ground among European voters … this tension between judicial decisions and popular demands could pose a significant challenge for liberal democracies,” says political analyst Teresa Nogueira Pinto, who teaches at the Universidade Lusófona in Lisbon, Portugal.

Vlasov Sulaj/AP

Migrants bound for Italy, initially sent to a new immigration processing camp in Albania, board a ship taking them to Italy, as ordered by a Rome court.

“Out of the box” or out of order?

The Rome court’s ruling followed an Oct. 4 decision by the European Court of Justice, which tightened the definition of what counts as a safe country to which failed asylum-seekers can legally be returned. Countries such as Tunisia, Egypt, and Bangladesh can only be declared safe if the entire territory is free of danger and nobody faces the threat of persecution.

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