The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Italy to start fingerprin­ting migrants at sea

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ROME: Italy is to introduce the fingerprin­ting of migrants crossing the Mediterran­ean as soon as they are picked up by rescue boats, officials say.

The move could help to reduce mounting tensions between Italy and its EU partners over the large numbers of migrants who arrive in Italy but are not registered here and then travel on to northern Europe.

If they are not registered in Italy, neighbouri­ng countries like Austria and France and popular destinatio­n states like Germany and Sweden do not have the option of sending them back to Italy.

In theory they should be able to do this under the EU’s Dublin convention rules governing asylum claims.

The Italian move follows talks on Wednesday between Interior Minister Angelo Alfano and EU migration commission­er Dimitris Avramopoul­osinSicily,wheremost migrants arrive and are processed at ‘hotspot’ reception centres.

“With this we will now have hotspots at sea,” Alfano said.

It was not clear if the policy will be applied systematic­ally – migrants picked up at sea are often in a traumatise­d state and asylum seekers from Eritrea notably generally refuse to have their prints taken because they want to make their applicatio­ns elsewhere.

Italy was warned last year by the European Commission that it must make its registrati­on procedures more efficient.

But Italian officials say the country cannot cope alone with the migrant influx.

More than 350,000 people from all over the world have reached Italy on boats from Libya since the start of 2014, as Europe battles its biggest migration crisis since World War II.

Alfano said that after problems in 2014, the process of identifyin­g migrants was now working “100 percent”.

With Austria on the verge of introducin­g anti-migrant checks at its border with Italy in the Alps, there is mounting concern in Rome that the country’s overcrowde­d reception facilities could soon have to deal with tens of thousands of additional asylum seekers.

Italian Prime Minister Matteo Renzi warned Austria not to go ahead with the border closure. “It would be a flagrant breach of European rules, as well as being against history, against logic and against the future.”

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