Italy to offer more migrant work visas to caregivers for old people

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FILE PHOTO: Elderly people take shelter from the sun at a bus station in Forli, Italy, July 19, 2023. REUTERS/Claudia Greco/File Photo

Elderly people sheltering from the sun at a bus station in Forli, Italy, on July 19, 2023.

PHOTO: REUTERS

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ROME – Italy will offer an extra 10,000 migrant work visas in 2025 for people who look after old people and the disabled, the government said on Oct 2, as it adopted a new package of migration rules.

Saddled with an ageing population and a sagging birth rate, Italy has long faced a shortage of caregivers, and charities including the Sant'Egidio Catholic group have lobbied the government to allow more of them to come from abroad.

The "experimental" extra quota for caregivers will add to the 452,000 work visas announced for the 2023-2025 period in 2023, an increase of nearly 150 per cent from the previous three years.

Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni's rightist government has passed an array of measures to curb illegal arrivals, but has also expanded legal immigration channels in response to growing labour shortages.

The decree on Oct 2 featured another crackdown on sea rescue NGOs, indicating that aircraft charities use to spot migrant boats in distress must immediately inform authorities of their movements or else face penalties.

The measure echoes what is already in place for NGO boats, which are subject to fines and grounding at port when Italian authorities decide that their rescue operations have not been correctly coordinated with the coast guard.

The new decree also introduced stricter anti-fraud safeguards in the migrant visa system, after Ms Meloni denounced it had been infiltrated and fraudulently exploited by crime groups, including the mafia.

The government statement said, among other things, that tougher checks would apply in 2025 for applications from countries deemed to be at higher risk of fraud, namely Bangladesh, Pakistan and Sri Lanka. REUTERS

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