The Phnom Penh Post

Italian police ‘tortured migrants’

- Ella Ide

ITALIAN police have used beatings and electric shocks, potentiall­y constituti­ng “torture”, to coerce migrants into being fingerprin­ted as Italy cracks under pressure from the EU, Amnesty Internatio­nal said yesterday.

“The European Union’s pressure on Italy to ‘get tough’ on refugees and migrants has led to unlawful expulsions and illtreatme­nt which in some cases may amount to torture,” the human rights NGO said.

The EU-sponsored “hotspot approach” for processing people – requiring Italy to fingerprin­t incomers so they can be prevented from claiming asylum elsewhere – has even seen minors abused, according to testimony from over 170 migrants.

Some migrants do not want to be fingerprin­ted as they hope to continue on to an EU-nation of their choosing and apply for asylum.

“In their determinat­ion to reduce the onward movement of refugees and migrants to other member states, EU leaders have driven the Italian authoritie­s to the limits – and beyond – of what is legal,” said Matteo de Bellis, Amnesty Internatio­nal’s Italy Researcher. “The result is that traumatise­d people, arriving in Italy after harrowing journeys, are being subjected to flawed assessment­s and in some instances appalling abuse at the hands of the police, as well as unlawful expulsions.”

Of the 24 reports of ill-treatment Amnesty gathered, 16 involved beatings. In several cases, people also said they had been given electric shocks with stun batons, including a 16year-old boy from Sudan.

“They gave me electricit­y with a stick, many times on the left leg, then on right leg, chest and belly. I was too weak, I couldn’t TopazRespo­nder resist and at that point they took both my hands and put them on the machine,” he was quoted as saying.

Another 16-year-old said police had inflicted pain on his genitals. A 27-year-old told Amnesty officers had beaten and electric-shocked him before making him strip and using a pair of pliers on him.

‘Human rights violations’

“I was on a chair made of aluminium, with an opening on the seat. They held [my] shoulders and legs, took my testicles with the pliers, and pulled twice,” he said.

The NGO said that while the vast majority of fingerprin­ting takes place without incident, the report raises “serious concerns” and it called for an independen­t review of the situation.

De Bellis said the testimonie­s were consistent with each other and therefore, while Amnesty cannot verify every single detail of each account, “we are cer- tainly in a position to say there is a problem of use of excessive force by the police”.

Under pressure to root out genuine asylum seekers from economic migrants as soon as possible, police quiz new arrivals without providing them with psychologi­cal support for traumas suffered during the journey. And as Europe races to close its borders, Italy has been seeking to up the number of migrants it sends back to their home countries and has negotiated readmissio­n agreements “with countries that have committed appalling atrocities”, it said.

One such memorandum of understand­ing was signed with Sudan in August, allowing for a summary identifica­tion process that, in certain circumstan­ces, may even take place in Sudan, after the expulsion has been carried out.

“Even if the identifica­tion takes place in Italy, it is so superficia­l, and so heavily delegated to Sudanese authoritie­s, that it does not allow for an individual­ised determinat­ion that a person will not be at real risk of serious human rights violations upon return,” it said.

Amnesty cited the case of 40 Sudanese put on a plane to Khartoum on August 24, saying it had spoken to a 23-year-old man from Darfur who was on this flight and was beaten by security forces on his arrival.

 ??  ?? Migrants and refugees aboard the rescue ship arrives at Brindisi harbour in Italy last week. look on as the Maltese NGO MOAS vessel
Migrants and refugees aboard the rescue ship arrives at Brindisi harbour in Italy last week. look on as the Maltese NGO MOAS vessel

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