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Italy stands against illegal immigration

 
 
 
 
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The Italian government has done what any sane government would do to protect itself from invasion and passed a law declaring it a criminal offence to enter Italy without permission or to aid invaders in any way.

In addition, the new law has instituted a policy of immediate deportation of the invaders themselves.

The law, passed yesterday in the Italian senate after earlier ratification by the lower house, states that people caught entering or living in Italy without a permit will not be taken to court but instead given immediate expulsion orders. They will also face fines of up to €10,000.

The law also says that Italians – unless they are doctors or others who will be exempted – will be obliged to report illegal immigrants. Those who knowingly house illegal migrants will face up to three years in prison.

In addition, the law includes tough fines for landlords who rent to illegal immigrants, and orders that no public services be provided to illegals or their offspring in Italy. It also requires parents registering a birth to present documents proving that they are legal residents.

The law will allow private citizens who are former members of the police or armed forces to help the police in crime hotspots.

Italy has also just introduced a policy of returning boatloads of migrants to Libya before they can make their bogus ‘asylum’ claims. More than 36,000 Third World invaders landed in Italy last year after crossing the Mediterranean on boats.

Background to the immigration invasion of Italy:

Italy had, until the late 1990s, one of the lowest reproduction rates in Europe, and the population was projected to go into dramatic decline over the next few decades.

However, a massive spike in Third World immigration – legal and illegal – had seen the population increase to an all-time estimated high of close to 60 million in 2008. This increase was, demographers pointed out, exclusively due to immigration.

Official government figures in 2005 said there were 3.7 million legal immigrants in Italy (an increase of 21.6 percent in one year). That figure represented 6.2 percent of the overall population.

However, the next year, another 700,000 were added to that figure, and the numbers are increasing to the point where, combined with the native natural Italian decline, the foreign-born population is set to be well above 10 million within the next decade.

These figures do not, of course, include illegal immigrants, who, in 2006, were estimated to be “between 670,000 and two million.” Italy’s long and porous coastline makes it an easy target for people smuggling, which has become its single greatest security problem.

The number of illegal immigrants entering Italy in 2008 showed no signs of slowing down, and doubled in the first seven months of that year compared with the same period in 2007. More than 15,000 illegal immigrants entered the EU via Italy between January and July 2008, Italian Interior Minister Roberto Maroni said in August 2008.

Most of the illegal immigrants come across the Mediterranean Sea from North Africa, often in unseaworthy boats. It has now become a familiar site in southern Italy to see packed boats filled with Africans, North Africans and Middle Easterners, arriving on a daily basis at various places along the coast.

These illegals typically pay smugglers in Libya for transit to the Italian island of Lampedusa (not all of them arrive). From there they are transferred to detention camps in mainland Italy and eventually released; their deportation orders are not enforced.

In Padua, the Third World immigrant crime wave forced the centre-left city council to order the building in 2006 of a steel wall around run-down apartment blocks housing an estimated 1500 illegal immigrants (”clandestini”). There is only one way into the complex, through a police checkpoint, where uniformed officers inspect everyone coming and going.

The building of the wall was sparked by an outbreak of street fighting between Nigerian and Moroccan drug gangs, when hundreds clashed with knives and machetes. The socialist mayor of Padua described it as an “enclosure” needed to help tackle the drug dealers.

“When the police tried to arrest the drug dealers in the other part of town they fled to this area here; now that’s no longer possible,” a city councillor told Dutch TV.

“We had to do something,” he continued, “otherwise the problem would be unsolvable. We still remember what happened in the French banlieues, and we don’t want that to happen here in Italy.”

Padua has a population of 205,000, of whom some 70,000 are recent migrants. According to the local authority, one in three of the newborns in the city is now of foreign origin.

In many Italian cities, including Rome, Brescia, Milan, Padua and Prato, Third World immigrants already account for more than 10 percent of the population.

Italy now has well in excess of one million Muslims, drawn from North Africa, Sub-Saharan Africa, and Muslim communities in the Balkans.

Bearing in mind that the native Italian population has for all practical purposes stopped reproducing, it is not far-fetched to predict that, unless this situation is reversed, many of the Italian cities will be Islamified within the next three decades.

A study conducted by the Turin-based Centro Federico Peirone in 2001-2002 showed that the family size of arrivals from Arab Muslim countries remained at an average of six – compared to a native Italian average of 1.3 children.

Italy also has what is typically called a ‘Romanian’ immigrant population. In reality, the vast majority of these ‘Romanians’ are Gypsies, or Roma, as the politically correct media likes to call them. Gypsies originated on the subcontinent of India and have been travelling across Eastern Europe for centuries. With the expansion of the EU to include Romania and other former Eastern Bloc European nations, these Gypsies have been allowed free passage to move into Italy in large numbers.

Around 500,000 ‘Romanians’ are officially registered as living in Italy, but unofficial estimates put the actual number at double that figure or perhaps even more. Their exceedingly violent criminality led, in 2008, to an Italian government crackdown on that community, and large numbers were summarily deported or barred from re-entering. ‘Romanians’ represent roughly 15 percent of the prison population in Italy and 5.6 percent of all arrests for murder.

The increased Third World immigration problem has been reflected in Italy’s prison population. In 2006, some 20,000 people out of the 55,000 prisoners serving sentences or awaiting trial in Italian jails were officially described as ‘foreigners’ – overwhelmingly Third World in origin.

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