The News Herald (Willoughby, OH)

Pope backs migrant farm workers as Italy considers legalizati­on

-

ROME » Migrant farm workers must be treated with dignity, Pope Francis said Wednesday, issuing his appeal as Italy weighs whether to legalize the workers amid a shortage of seasonal farmhands due to the coronaviru­s crisis.

Farm lobby groups and some Italian lawmakers and ministers have warned that the spring and summer harvests are at risk because Italy’s usual seasonal workers, many of whom live in Eastern Europe, are stuck at home because of virus travel restrictio­ns.

Francis said he had been struck by the impact of the COVID-19 crisis on migrant farm workers, who even before the pandemic lived hand-to-mouth with intermitte­nt jobs that pay around 25 euro ($27) a day. While migrants are not testing positive in great numbers, their precarious, off-the-books work has dried up because of Italy’s coronaviru­s lockdown.

“It is true that the current crisis affects everyone, but people’s dignity must always be respected. That is why I add my voice to the appeal of these workers and of all exploited workers,” Francis said at his weekly audience. “May the crisis give us the opportunit­y to make the dignity of the person and of work the center of our concern.”

Agricultur­e Minister Teresa Bellanova, of the center-left Italia Viva party, has proposed giving temporary, six-month renewable residency permits to the migrants already in Italy who pick lemons, oranges and tomatoes but in wretched labor conditions. The proposal would also require farm owners to pay taxes for them and offer them contracts.

Bellanova, who says a failure to pass the proposal could force her to quit the government, has been backed by the interior minister and minister for the south, who also wants to legalize Italy’s army of offthe-books foreign domestic workers who care for the elderly at home.

But the majority 5-Star Movement party is divided on the issue and Italy’s right-wing opposition is strongly opposed to it.

Interior Minister Luciana Lamorgese told RAI state radio on Wednesday that within the government there was a general agreement that these unregister­ed migrant farm hands, as well as Italians who work in the undergroun­d economy, should be brought into Italy’s legitimate workforce.

“We need to bring these workers out, not just to guarantee their rights but also because of the health security requiremen­ts at this time,” Lamorgese said.

The numbers of the socalled “invisibles” in Italy are estimated at around 600,000, with about a third working in agricultur­e.

Matteo Salvini of the right-wing League Party, who articulate­d Italy’s hard-line anti-migrant policy when he was previously interior minister, says an emergency 2 billion euro ($2.1 billion) fund is needed to save Italy’s agricultur­e sector.

“The priority now is to help Italians pay their mortgages, bills and rent and save businesses. Surely, it’s not thinking about an amnesty for thousands of clandestin­e migrants,” he tweeted.

 ?? ALESSANDRA TARANTINO — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A woman wearing a sanitary mask to protect against COVID-19holds her daughter as she walks past a building April 27 in Castel Volturno, near Naples, Southern Italy.
ALESSANDRA TARANTINO — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A woman wearing a sanitary mask to protect against COVID-19holds her daughter as she walks past a building April 27 in Castel Volturno, near Naples, Southern Italy.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States