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The Ripper
04-22-2011, 07:39 PM
France may temporarily suspend open border system
22 April 2011 | 21:03 | FOCUS News Agency
Home / European Union

Paris. France may temporarily suspend Europe's visa-free Schengen border agreement due to an influx of migrants from Tunisia and Libya, the presidential office said on Friday, cited by AFP.

France has accused Italy of abusing the Schengen pact by issuing temporary residence permits and travel documents to the migrants knowing that the French-speaking Tunisians are headed for France.

More than 20,000 Tunisian migrants have arrived on Italian shores from Tunisia, complaining that a January revolution that toppled president Zine El Abidine Ben Ali has failed to bring economic progress to their homeland.
Italy has given them residence permits for six months.

Source (http://www.focus-fen.net/?id=n247831)

Plenty of interesting stuff happening recently. The Portugal bailout, which looks uncertain after the elections in Finland, and now this, as a response to the wave of migrants from North Africa. A convergence of crisis?

Peyrol
04-22-2011, 07:43 PM
Here in Italy we don't want them, that's for sure.

askra
04-22-2011, 07:46 PM
Source (http://www.focus-fen.net/?id=n247831)

Plenty of interesting stuff happening recently. The Portugal bailout, which looks uncertain after the elections in Finland, and now this, as a response to the wave of migrants from North Africa. A convergence of crisis?

France was the first country to bomb Lybia, and now it doesn't want to take its responsibilities in regard to illegal immigration from North Africa!

The Ripper
04-22-2011, 07:48 PM
France was the first country to bomb Lybia, and now it doesn't want to take its responsibilities in regard to illegal immigration from North Africa!

President Le Pen? :D

Peyrol
04-22-2011, 07:50 PM
France was the first country to bomb Lybia, and now it doesn't want to take its responsibilities in regard to illegal immigration from North Africa!

Loro si accaparrano i contratti petroliferi...e lasciano a noi la marmaglia umana che preme alle frontiere...furbo Sarkò.

askra
04-22-2011, 08:03 PM
President Le Pen? :D

me?
not really, politically i'm very far from extremism of Le Pen! :)

Svanhild
04-23-2011, 12:26 AM
Here in Italy we don't want them, that's for sure.
Then send them back with your Italian marine.

Peyrol
04-23-2011, 12:29 AM
Then send them back with your Italian marine.

Mhh....was made a proposal about this, but the opposition (Socialdemocrats, Chrtistan democrats and Communist) are closing pressing the minister of defence, Ignazio La Russa, to mantain the status quo and give permissions to the tunisinian.

Also, the National Council of Free Lybia asked them to send the troops...but also Gheddafi ask Berlusconi to send some troops...this is the problem.:(

The Ripper
04-26-2011, 01:22 PM
France and Italy push for reform of Schengen treaty

The leaders of France and Italy have said Europe's Schengen open-border treaty should be revised.

The move by President Nicolas Sarkozy and PM Silvio Berlusconi comes after they met to discuss the recent rise in North African migration to Europe.

Italy has angered France by granting visas to thousands of migrants, allowing them to travel across Europe's border-free Schengen zone.

About 25,000 migrants have arrived in southern Italy so far during 2011.

Many have fled unrest in North Africa, and among them are thousands of Tunisians hoping to join relatives in France.

Both Mr Berlusconi and Mr Sarkozy are facing domestic pressure from right-wing parties to curb large-scale immigration.

The Schengen treaty allows legal residents of most EU countries, Switzerland, Norway and Iceland to travel across the zone with only minimal border checks.

Speaking at a news conference in Rome after their meeting, Mr Berlusconi said neither Italy nor France wanted the treaty to end.

"But in exceptional circumstances, we both believe that there should be variations to the Schengen treaty, and we've decided to work on that together," he said.

Mr Berlusconi said the two leaders had jointly written to the European Commission asking that the treaty be investigated.

In addition, he said there should be a "principle of solidarity" among European countries, and that southern states along the Mediterranean should not be left on their own to deal with the problems posed by mass immigration.

France and Italy would also ask the Tunisian government to collaborate with them in dissuading migrants from coming to Europe, Mr Berlusconi said.

Mr Sarkozy said the Schengen agreement had to be reformed if it was to survive.

"We have the euro, we have reformed the European economy - we would like to see the same thing done to Schengen," he said.

The BBC's Duncan Kennedy in Rome says it is a sign of the depth of the tensions created by the migration crisis that they two countries are seeking a revision of the treaty.

Neither country wants to accommodate the North Africa migrants and both want to ensure the situation is not repeated in the future, says our correspondent, so they are calling on Brussels to resolve the problem.

But, he adds, the treaty took years to negotiate so revising it will not be a simple process.

Patrols

Migrants heading to Europe from North Africa often arrive at the Italian island of Lampedusa, which lies about 120km (75 miles) off the Tunisian coast.

The upheavals across the Arab world have triggered a huge wave of migration, and Italy has complained it is being left to cope with the influx alone.

Earlier this month Italy and France agreed to joint sea and air patrols to try to stop African migrants reaching Europe.


France promised to honour the temporary visas Italy has granted the migrants but has said it will turn away those who cannot support themselves financially.

Last week, French police temporarily blocked an Italian train carrying Tunisian migrants from entering France.

Mr Sarkozy also used Tuesday's meeting to praise Italy's earlier announcement that it was sending aircraft to Libya to take part in Nato air strikes.

He said that given Rome's close historical ties to Libya, "who could possibly believe that Italy would not take part in the work of the coalition to allow Libyans to live in freedom after 41 years of dictatorship?"

The two leaders also called for an end to the violent repression of anti-government protests in Syria.

BBC (http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-13189682)

Cato
04-26-2011, 02:28 PM
http://t2.gstatic.com/images?q=tbn:ANd9GcRNPwKNsxg_J-n9sZsC3y45VotnvKGe-j6LF7RnQTLI2aIK-4hm&t=1

Stop holding France's door open cracka!