Immigration Law

bus.jpg

Today a public service bus travelling near Novara was hijacked. A police officer was injured and the bus was set on fire. The people who did this were 3 non-Europeans. It’s the umpteenth episode that can be put down to ungoverned immigration and that first damages the immigrants who have gone through all the procedures.
A foreigner who commits crimes or who comes into Italy without going through the procedures must be immediately repatriated.
They must serve their criminal sentence in their own countries. Up until now the laws that have been produced have created insecurity among the citizens, and that will continue until there is application of the principle that whoever comes into Italy must observe the laws without any discussion.
The “be nice to everyone” and “wait-and-see” attitudes of certain parties in the government and in the opposition are generating in public opinion, a refusal to accept foreigners. Rules must be changed before intolerance and racism spread more.
Every day there are news items on the front page about crimes committed by foreigners-without-papers and stories of new boatloads arriving.
It’s obvious that things can’t continue like that for long.
The law must be changed. Anyone who is stopped because they are clandestines cannot then be released with a written instruction to leave.
They should be expelled and repatriated immediately. No more and no less than happens in most western countries.
There’s no point in sending troops to Afghanistan if we cannot first guarantee our national borders.

Posted by Antonio Di Pietro in
Comments(5) | Write a comment | Sign-up | Send to a friend | Print



Comments

Agree one hundred per cent with the leader of the Italia dei Valori, party, the right on. Antonio Di Pietro. Io scrivo questo messaggio da Vancouver, Canada, da dove risiedo dal 1961, inclusi gli Stati Uniti d'America, e oggi ho scoperto questo sito e voglio complimentare il suo partito al quale ho intenzione di mettermi in contatto prossimamente, registrandomi e ottenere la tessera. Alla mia eta' di 66 anni, nato a Pietracamela (Teramo)e emigrato all'eta' di 20 anni, dopo che in seguito alla morte di mio padre sul lavoro il governo italiano ha provveduto alla mia educazione e carriera professionale come ingegnere elettronico, al quale ho la piu' profonda gratitudine e oggi vorrei ripagare indietro, e ritornando in Italia con la mia pensione canadese e ritornare in Abruzzo. Detto questo, in riguardo all'emigrazione, anche qui in America ascolto talk show sulla emigrazione in America per oggi cordiali saluti

Postated by: V.Annibale | June 1, 2007 03:48 AM


This is relevant - from Beppe Grillo's Blog:

Racism Italian Style
Italians are not racists. They don’t want to be racist. The Italians are nice people with pizza and mandolins. An Italian can accept to be labeled in different ways: tax dodger, mafia, corrupt.
That’s not a problem. He finds these are compliments. But if you call him a racist he turns into a beast. And the further he is to the left, the more he gets angry.
It’s a fight with himself. A struggle that has resulted in Italian-style racism. A racism that isn’t there but exists. A racism that makes us all feel better. In other words, the Italian has removed racism.
He has done it with discretion, giving due weight to the news.
If a Polish baby is shot in Naples and dies, if a guy from Sri Lanka is knifed in Milan, or if people from North Africa are buried alive in Puglia during the tomato harvest, the news is given with discretion.
It’s on the tenth page for a day. If the dead person is indigenous, that’s the trigger for the murder hunt.
The death of a foreigner is hardly noticed. The death of one of us is noted much more.
If .there’s the mass rape for 30 euros of children who are foreign, even aged 12 or 13, in the streets of the whole country, that’s folklore.
If one of our girls is attacked it goes on the front page. If foreign children are thrown into the streets to ask for alms or to sell their bodies, that’s folklore. If that happens to an Italian child, the parents land up in prison.
The Rumanian murderer is a monster, the Italian one is a delinquent.
Our foreigners are compared to foreigners living in their own home. Numbers, not people. Who thinks about the 50 people a day who die in Iraq or in the Darfur slaughter? The prisons are full of foreigners who haven’t understood the rules.
Exactly. They are rules that aren’t there. In our country that doesn’t exist, the rules are an option.
The Italian knows that, they get by, they go ahead and survive, they go into prescrizione without ever passing “Go”. However, the foreigner goes directly to jail, because they believe that impunity is a life style, not a crime.
Sarkozy has won to bring back the law. Veltroni has said that the rule of law is a right, without specifying for which income band. Whoever is not yet racist will become racist. It’s the country that wants it.
Posted by Beppe Grillo on May 9, 2007

Postated by: Elizabeth Birks | May 16, 2007 08:07 PM


Some solutions can seem good until you realise that you are talking about real people. Some of whom may be fleeing from terrible situations at home. If someone has managed to arrive in your city from Baghdad, would you still want to send them back? And if they had their documents stolen on the journey? Would it make a difference how well they speak your language? How well educated they are? What religion they are? If they have children?


greetings

Elizabeth


Postated by: Elizabeth Birks | May 16, 2007 08:05 PM



www.gliscomunicati.it

Postated by: Alessia Di stefano | May 16, 2007 04:04 PM


Dear Dott. Di Pietro,

I totally agree with the contents of your message although I cannot catch the link between savage immigration and the italian troops in Afganistan.
Why doesn't the government publish the statistics showing that delinquence, prostitution and crimes 's increase is directly proportional to clandestine immigration? Numbers are often more eloquent than words. And why the local police don't check the street beggars' papers? Many of them have provided a false employment contract - thanks to some bribe paid to some sindacato's volunteer - in order to get the permesso o carta di soggiorno. It often seems that italian police has no concern about this problem and just close the eyes.

Monique lL.

Postated by: Le Bel Monique | May 16, 2007 02:48 PM

 


Rules to comment the articles

Your messages will be published directly.
This is a public space though, there are some rules that need to be attended.

The following are not allowed:

1. messages without the email address of the sender
2. anonymous messages
3. advertising messages
4. messages containing obscene or offensive language
5. messages with racist or sexist content
6. messages with content that constitutes a violation of Italian Law (incitement to commit a crime, to violence, libel etc.)


Post a comment


Name and Surname*:

Your email *:
Anonymous messages will be removed
Your website :



characters left

* Compulsory fields



Send to a friend

Send an email to *:


Your email *:


Message:


* Compulsory fields