Rome, October 22. (Adnkronos) – The belief, or rather the hope, is that the decree on safe countries, approved by the Council of Ministers yesterday to break the impasse in which the Rome court ruling hastened the conclusion of the memorandum with Albania, “will succeed: there is no plan B, there is no need for it.” . For the government, having “exported” the list of safe countries into a preliminary law, and included the list in a dedicated decree, is enough to put the hotspots created in Shengjin and Gadir back on track.
Yesterday, in the press conference that followed the CDM, Council Undersecretary Alfredo Mantovano, the “manager” of the solution, did not rule out new legislative interventions if they were ever needed. “But there is no need to put the cart before the horse – a reliable government source tells Adnkronos – the measure will work because it has been made clear, through state law, who is responsible for determining which countries are safe and which are not, and the rest is just speculation…”
However, the fear of reinstating the judges' suspension is palpable. In Palazzo Chigi and in all ministries affected by the file. There is no room for retreat from the two hypotheses that were put forward last Friday to get out of the quagmire – the one that was adopted by the Council of Ministers yesterday, and the other, which was ignored, which is to assign a law to a special structure of the “Farnesina” with the task of drawing up the list of safe countries: “If the draft country law does not succeed It would be completely useless to create a dedicated structure in Varnesina, because the same mechanism that regulates repatriations would disappear, far from the Albania model…”
Meanwhile, while the expected text is being finalized in the Quirinale and the possibility of an appeal to the Court of Appeal against court orders not to verify detentions, the Interior Ministry returns to the offensive and appeals to the Supreme Court against the Rome judges' ruling that invalidated the detention of the 12 migrants transferred to Bari. Last Saturday in Albania, putting aside fears that the resumption would once again ignite the clash between the state authorities, which Matofanu himself tried to ignite yesterday in a press conference.
“The appeal was necessary – the logic that resonated in the minds of the government – also to support the choice of the Council of Ministers and avoid, from now on, that non-ratification becomes serial. The government continues to move forward: the message must be clear to everyone.”
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