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Turkish, Italian, Libyan leaders meet to address migration and Libya's stability

Turkish, Italian, Libyan leaders meet to address migration and Libya's stability

Independent6 days ago
Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan hosted Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni and Libyan Prime Minister Abdul-Hamid Dbeibah in Istanbul on Friday for a summit centered on addressing migration, enhancing cooperation, and supporting Libya's political stability.
A statement issued by Meloni's office following the closed-door session said the three discussed strengthening cooperation in the Mediterranean region, starting with the management of migration flows.
Meloni praised the 'excellent results achieved' through collaboration with Turkey on migration control, saying that the lessons learned from working with Ankara should be used to support the Libyan Government of National Unity's efforts on migration, according to a statement by her office.
Erdogan stated that 'long-term and sustainable' solutions were needed to eliminate the root cause of migration, according to a statement from his office.
Libya is a dominant transit point for migrants fleeing war and poverty in Africa and the Middle East. Drowning incidents near the country's coast have been common. In December, at least 61 migrants, including women and children, drowned off the town of Zuwara on Libya's western coast.
The Italian prime minister also reaffirmed Italy's commitment 'to Libya's stability, unity, and independence,' and its support for a Libyan-led, United Nations-facilitated political process leading to elections.
The Turkish presidential statement said the three leaders would reconvene to evaluate decisions taken, following lower-level technical meetings.
Oil-rich Libya plunged into chaos after a NATO-backed uprising toppled and killed longtime dictator Moammar Gadhafi in 2011. In the disarray that followed, the country split into rival administrations in the east and west, each backed by rogue militias and foreign governments.
Turkey has been allied with the Tripoli-based government in the west, but has recently taken steps to improve ties with the eastern-based government as well.
In 2019, Turkey reached an agreement with the Tripoli-based government which delineated maritime boundaries between Libya and Turkey, angering Greece and Cyprus which say the agreement infringes on their rights.
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Pauline Hanson claims International students are taking Aussie jobs and dodging tax
Pauline Hanson claims International students are taking Aussie jobs and dodging tax

Daily Mail​

time2 hours ago

  • Daily Mail​

Pauline Hanson claims International students are taking Aussie jobs and dodging tax

has slammed the Albanese Government for boosting international student numbers, claiming many are working cash-in-hand, dodging tax, and taking jobs from everyday Australians. Labor will raise the 2026 cap to 295,000 international student places, 25,000 more than flagged for 2025, despite warnings the system is being abused. Critics, including Hanson and former Treasury economist Leith Van Onselen, say the student visa scheme is no longer about education, but about cheap labour and permanent migration. The Albanese Government brushed off mounting criticism and said it would work with universities to boost the availability of student accommodation. 'International education is an incredibly important export industry for Australia, but we need to manage its growth so it's sustainable,' education minister Jason Clare said. But Hanson says the student visa system is a racket. 'Many of these people are taking jobs that should be held by Australians – often for under-the-table cash, which is then sent home. 'The Institute of Public Affairs showed that foreign students earned $15.4 billion in Australia through part-time work in 2023, with more than $10.5 billion of it being sent back overseas. 'This puts a huge dent in the claim this "industry" is worth almost $50 billion a year to the national economy – it isn't. Hanson said any foreign student found not to be paying tax should have their visa cancelled, 'and should be thrown on the next flight back to their home'. She said Australian universities are classified as not-for-profit institutions. 'This status enables them to avoid paying tax on the upfront fees foreign students pay them, and to which they have become addicted like meth junkies. 'Australian taxpayers are being ripped off by the 'international student' racket.' In the year to May, 794,113 international students were enrolled in education across the country, with education now Australia's biggest services export and the fourth-biggest export after iron ore, coal, and natural gas. While China still leads in international student numbers at 167,147, India and Nepal have seen significant increases, moving into second and third spots with 123,456 and 57,048 students, respectively. Leith Van Onselen, a former Treasury economist, highlighted a survey by Allianz Partners Australia that found 68.4 per cent of international students plan to stay in Australia long-term. 'Students from South Asia and Africa choose a study destination based on their capacity to gain job rights, a low-cost course, and permanent residency,' Mr Van Onselen said. 'With the exception of students from China and Europe, all source nations placed a high value on the potential to work while studying and post-study employment opportunities. 'It should be no surprise, then, that Australia has witnessed the greatest increase in student numbers from nations that rely on paid employment. 'Indian students and migration agents celebrated Labor's federal election victory because they know that it means easier entry into Australia. 'Australia's policymakers and media should drop the charade and acknowledge that international education is an immigration racket.' A new Reserve Bank report found that the soaring number of international students was putting pressure on the housing market during a time of high construction costs. 'The number of international students onshore is still near record highs, and student visa arrivals have exceeded departures in recent months, suggesting the number of students onshore is growing,' it said. 'In the face of a relatively fixed supply of housing in the short term, we would expect an increase in international students to put upward pressure on rental demand and rents (all else equal),' the report said. 'Capacity constraints, high costs in the construction sector, and low levels of building approvals relative to the population may mean the housing supply response could be slower to materialise compared with in the past.'

World's longest suspension bridge to be built between Italy and Sicily - with £12BILLION plan approved 2,000 years after it was first dreamed up
World's longest suspension bridge to be built between Italy and Sicily - with £12BILLION plan approved 2,000 years after it was first dreamed up

Daily Mail​

time6 hours ago

  • Daily Mail​

World's longest suspension bridge to be built between Italy and Sicily - with £12BILLION plan approved 2,000 years after it was first dreamed up

The Italian government has given final approval to a £12billion project to build the world's largest suspension bridge that will connect Sicily to the mainland. The 2.3 mile Strait of Messina Bridge had been held up for decades over mafia infiltration, earthquake, and financial concerns. But Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni yesterday declared it was an investment in Italy's present and future and added: 'We like difficult challenges when they make sense.' Work is expected to be completed by 2032 and the bridge will be held up by four main steel cables measuring 1.26 metres in diameter. The project has faced stiff opposition from those who question the wisdom of building such a bridge in an earthquake zone. Many also fear cost overruns, possible environmental damage and mafia infiltration in construction contracts. The bridge will measure 60 metres wide and will have six traffic lanes, two railway tracks, two service lanes, and will be supported by two towers standing 399 metres high. Some citizens' groups opposed to the bridge say it is unnecessary, and environmental associations this week filed a complaint with the European Union, flagging serious risks for the local environment. They have argued there are threats to birds migrating between Europe and Africa, while it is also located in one of the most seismically active areas in the Mediterranean. 'CIPESS is a biased arbiter, we hope that real arbiters - third party figures, the Court of Auditors, the EU, the judiciary - will come and stop this game, which is devastating for our territory,' no-bridge campaigner Daniele Ialacqua told Reuters. Yet the bridge also has strong support from those who believe a fast rail and road connection will provide a much-needed boost to Sicily and the rest of Italy's southern regions. The current ferry crossing takes about 20 minutes, plus boarding and disembarkation which can require hours at peak times. Trains to and from Sicily are also taken onboard ferries, in a process that takes around two hours. Italy is seeking to categorise investment in the bridge as part of defence spending, which would help it meet pledges by NATO countries to boost military budgets to 5% of gross domestic product by 2035. Matteo Salvini, leader of the co-ruling League party and Transport Minister said the infrastructure would have both civilian and military purposes. 'It is obvious that it is dual-use and can therefore be used for security reasons too,' he said in a press conference. The Strait of Messina Bridge Project was awarded to the Eurolink consortium following an international tender. The bridge will measure 60 metres wide and will have six traffic lanes, two railway tracks, two service lanes, and will be supported by two towers standing 399 metres high Italy's largest construction company, Webuild, leads the consortium, which includes Spanish group Sacyr and Japan's IHI. According to the Messina Strait Company, Wednesday's approval will allow the start of preliminary works, including archaeological and geological surveys. Land expropriations will also be authorised. The Court of Auditors, however, will first need to validate the committee's decision. A source close to the matter said this could take a few weeks, and Salvini said work could start in September-October.

Giorgia Meloni's Italian renaissance
Giorgia Meloni's Italian renaissance

Spectator

time8 hours ago

  • Spectator

Giorgia Meloni's Italian renaissance

Rome Last weekend, Rome hosted nearly a million young pilgrims to celebrate the Papal Jubilee of Youth. Part Woodstock festival, part giant outdoor mass and all-night vigil, crowds of students from all over Italy and beyond gathered to listen to Christian rock music, sing hymns and receive the blessing of the new Pope. Leo XIV, arriving in a white papal helicopter, was feted like a rock star. The event was orderly, joyous and a sign of a society at peace with itself and proud of its heritage. The way Italians carry on, you'd think the country was booming. The Lombardy and Veneto regions are gearing up to host the 2026 Winter Olympics. Central Rome has been transformed for the four-times-a-century papal jubilee year, with five city squares refurbished and more than 500 churches and palaces restored. Naples has unveiled an award-winning new metro line, and a trans-Apennine high-speed rail link between Naples and Bari is nearing completion. Rome and Naples' notorious rubbish collection problems have been miraculously cleared up. And perhaps most remarkable of all, Italy's firecracker of a Prime Minister, Giorgia Meloni, enjoys approval ratings of more than 40 per cent two years into her term. On paper, Italy has been suffering from the same economic malaise as the rest of Europe, with growth at a sluggardly 0.7 per cent, a whopping budget deficit of 7 per cent, and one of the worst demographic profiles on the continent. But one thing macroeconomic statistics don't show is how affordable everyday life is in Italy. Even in the smartest café in central Rome an espresso costs €1.20 (as long as you drink it al banco – standing at the bar). Last week, at a gloriously time-frozen 1950s café in downtown Sulmona, Abruzzo, I paid just €0.60 for a coffee personally served by the elderly proprietor. A pizza margherita is no more than €10 anywhere. Outside the swankiest areas of central Rome and Milan, rents are laughably affordable compared with the UK. Adjusted for spending power, Italians are richer than Britons. On a day-to-day level the basic functions of the Italian state – from law and order to healthcare to public transport – work dramatically better than their counterparts in the UK. Last week my son fractured his ankle during some late-night shenanigans in a Rome park and called an ambulance. It arrived in 25 minutes and he was seen by two doctors, X-rayed and discharged within two hours from San Carlo di Nancy, the Vatican hospital – all for free. During a recent hour-long stroll through central Rome, I counted a staggering 55 police officers patrolling three and a half miles of streets. Late at night on the bustling Viale Trastevere people stand waiting for the crossing lights, blithely holding their phones up to their faces with no fear that a hooded thug might ride by on a bike and snatch them – a horror I recently witnessed outside London's Victoria Station. Another major difference is that the media catastrophism over immigration, collapsing social cohesion, youth violence, the growth of militant Islam and the plague of shoplifting and street robbery that has gripped Britain and France is largely absent in Italy. Neither has mainstream Italian political discourse ever been much troubled by debates over woke shibboleths such as the legacy of slavery, trans rights or decolonisation. Italians do love to complain – Italy ranks 14th in European happiness rankings, slightly below the continental average. But what makes the country stand out is that its governing class is much more closely aligned with the broadly socially conservative, anti-woke opinions held by a majority of its voters. Sir Keir Starmer, infamously, was unable to say what a woman is. By contrast, the passionate speech that projected Meloni to prominence in 2019 was an unashamed statement of conservative values. 'We will defend our identity,' she yelled. 'I am Giorgia, I am a woman, I am a mother, I am Italian, and I am Christian! You will never take that from me!' Meloni campaigned on immigration controls, family values and national sovereignty, and vowed to bring in tax reforms to support small businesses and the family. She was against abortion, the promotion of gay rights in schools, gay adoption and surrogacy and the dominance of the European Union. 'We defend God, fatherland and family,' was the slogan of her Brothers of Italy party, which has its roots in post-war fascism. But though the motto was used by Mussolini, it was in fact coined by the Italian founding father Giuseppe Mazzini in the 1860s – a classic example of the doppiezza, literally doubleness, of Meloni's political identity that some say dog-whistles fascism but in practice tends towards pragmatic conservatism. When Meloni was elected in 2022, many saw her as an Italian Viktor Orban, or even a European Donald Trump. British media described her as 'far-right', and even Joe Biden called her rise something for democracies to be worried about. But instead of following recent Italian protest parties – such as Beppe Grillo's nihilist Five-Star Movement – Meloni has shown herself to be a serious political operator. 'Meloni increasingly looks like the face of Europe's future,' was the verdict of CNN's Fareed Zakaria. Since coming to power Meloni has tacked to the left on economic policy while pursuing a pro-Ukraine stance in defiance of the more pro-Putin elements of her coalition partners, Salvini's Lega. Her withering Euroscepticism softened into co-operation with Brussels – which has in turn brought a golden rain of EU cash that has funded many of Italy's infrastructure splurges, from Rome's jubilee renovation to new metros and rail lines. She has worked hard to find ways to shut down illegal immigration, doing deals with Tunisia, Egypt and Libya to cut off flows of migrants across the Mediterranean. She also set up processing centres in Albania, deploying 500 police officers to staff the centres where newly arrived male migrants would be immediately deported – only to be stymied by Italian and European courts who have ruled the scheme a breach of human rights. Increasingly Meloni's views on immigration – once decried as extreme – are becoming the mainstream. A few years ago at a rally held by the Spanish right-wing party Vox, she denounced the threat from 'the secularism of the left and Islamic radicalisation' and called for a defence of 'our civilisation' against 'those who want to destroy it'. More controversially, she has also dared to say that Italy does not want immigrants from Africa, or those who are Muslim. 'Every nation has the right to choose an immigration that is more compatible with its own culture,' Meloni said in 2018. 'In Venezuela, there are millions of people starving – they are Christian, often of Italian origin. So if we need immigrants, let's take them from Venezuela.' Last year Starmer came to Meloni for tips on how to control illegal boat crossings – though apparently failed to pick up on the fact that rather than housing migrants in luxury hotels, the Italian authorities confine them in repatriation holding centres which have been compared to prison camps. For sure, Italy has some serious social and political problems. Reported crimes in Milan approach 75 per cent of London's rates (though with far less violence and knife crime). Unemployment for the under-24s stands at 20.1 per cent, and wages are low compared with northern Europe – which has led at least 450,000 Italians to move to the UK. But there is also a steady exodus of wealthy Britons going in the other direction, many taking advantage of Meloni's tax breaks that allow non-domiciled foreigners to pay a flat rate on worldwide earnings. Italy has also introduced new visa categories and tax rates for high-skilled international digital nomads and entrepreneurs. Unlike the British government, the Meloni administration believes that attracting wealthy residents to your country makes good economic sense. It's easy to idealise Italy. But everything that I have observed in five decades of visiting this country, and four years as a resident, confirms that it is an extraordinarily healthy, self-confident and content society. In recent years Italy has cleaned up its formerly endemic corruption and made its state-run health and security services work as well as any in Europe. Now Meloni may be about to crack the deepest Italian political problem of all, which is an inherently unstable constitutional system that has given Italy 69 governments since 1945. In short, Meloni is showing Europe how a country should be run: for the people, and by their values.

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