So-called refugee “hotspots”—touted by European leaders as a key strategy to deal with the ever-growing influx of people seeking to escape war and poverty in their home countries—are being described as “prison-like,” raising fresh concerns about the humanitarian dimension of the crisis.
At last month’s emergency summit in Brussels, European heads of state agreed to funnel at least €1.1 billion to help refugees and establish processing centers—”hotspots”—in Greece and Italy, where the largest numbers of asylum-seekers are arriving. From the start, the proposal raised “the disturbing specter of internment camps dotted around Greece and Italy,” as the Associated Press wrote last week.
While details about the hotspots remain murky, what is clear is that the facilities will be used to register and fingerprint refugees before they are either assigned to one of the 25 European Union countries that have agreed to host them, or deported.
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Describing the Pozzallo facility in Sicily, EurActiv writes:
It will be one of Italy’s brand new hotspots for identifying newly-arrived migrants—but as the Pozzallo reception centre in Sicily prepares its fingerprinting kits, the EU-led plan for these facilities is still plagued with unresolved issues.
For now, the vast hangar overlooking the sea in southern Italy hosts the majority of migrants landing here each week, giving them time to wash and rest, before they are sent on to more permanent centres to file asylum requests.
[…] When Pozzallo becomes an official hotspot at the end of November, new arrivals will instead be obliged to provide their fingerprints as part of an asylum request, or be taken to a detention centre to await expulsion from Italy.
The hotspots will be closed-door centres, sharply reducing the chance that people can flee and head north off their own backs.