Return-path: <[log in to unmask]> Received: from smtp6.wiscmail.wisc.edu (fafnerpvt [144.92.197.203]) by mailst3.doit.wisc.edu (iPlanet Messaging Server 5.2 Patch 2 (built Jul 14 2004)) with ESMTP id <[log in to unmask]> for [log in to unmask]; Mon, 01 Nov 2004 11:44:49 -0600 (CST) Received: from avs-daemon.smtp6.wiscmail.wisc.edu by smtp6.wiscmail.wisc.edu (iPlanet Messaging Server 5.2 Patch 2 (built Jul 14 2004)) id <[log in to unmask]> for [log in to unmask] (ORCPT [log in to unmask]); Mon, 01 Nov 2004 11:44:50 -0600 (CST) Received: from ms4.lga2.nytimes.com (ms4.lga2.nytimes.com [199.239.138.148]) by smtp6.wiscmail.wisc.edu (iPlanet Messaging Server 5.2 Patch 2 (built Jul 14 2004)) with ESMTP id <[log in to unmask]> for [log in to unmask] (ORCPT [log in to unmask]); Mon, 01 Nov 2004 11:44:48 -0600 (CST) Received: from web38t.prvt.nytimes.com (web38t.prvt.nytimes.com [10.5.101.138]) by ms4.lga2.nytimes.com (Postfix) with ESMTP id 5939BB24FC for <[log in to unmask]>; Mon, 01 Nov 2004 12:44:47 -0500 (EST) Received: by web38t.prvt.nytimes.com (Postfix, from userid 4040) id 9C0AE35040; Mon, 01 Nov 2004 12:44:46 -0500 (EST) Date: Mon, 01 Nov 2004 12:44:46 -0500 (EST) From: [log in to unmask] Subject: NYTimes.com Article: Somali Refugees Find a New Kind of Hardship in Italy Sender: [log in to unmask] To: [log in to unmask] Errors-to: [log in to unmask] Reply-to: [log in to unmask] Message-id: <[log in to unmask]> MIME-version: 1.0 Content-type: text/plain; charset=US-ASCII Content-transfer-encoding: 7BIT X-Spam-Score: * X-Spam-Report: IsSpam=no, Probability=15%, Hits=FRAUD_419_X3 1.667, NO_REAL_NAME 0, __CT 0, __CT_TEXT_PLAIN 0, __FRAUD_419_BADTHINGS 0, __FRAUD_419_DPTCOMPNY 0, __FRAUD_419_LOC 0, __HAS_MSGID 0, __LINES_OF_YELLING 0, __MIME_VERSION 0, __SANE_MSGID 0 X-Spam-PmxInfo: Server=avs-8, Version=4.7.0.111621, Antispam-Engine: 2.0.1.0, Antispam-Data: 2004.10.31.0, SenderIP=199.239.138.148 Original-recipient: rfc822;[log in to unmask] The article below from NYTimes.com has been sent to you by [log in to unmask] /--------- E-mail Sponsored by Fox Searchlight ------------\ SIDEWAYS - NOW PLAYING IN SELECT CITIES An official selection of the New York Film Festival and the Toronto International Film Festival, SIDEWAYS is the new comedy from Alexander Payne, director of ELECTION and ABOUT SCHMIDT. Starring Paul Giamatti, Thomas Haden Church, Sandra Oh and Virginia Madsen. Watch the trailer at: http://www.foxsearchlight.com/sideways/index_nyt.html \----------------------------------------------------------/ Somali Refugees Find a New Kind of Hardship in Italy October 31, 2004 By IAN FISHER ROME, Oct. 30 - Not a stray human sound escapes the old Somali Embassy in a discreet and elegant neighborhood in northern Rome. But creak open the iron gate, and another world emerges. It is, more precisely, a place where worlds converge: the rich and the poor; the order of Europe and the chaos outside it. For a bed, two men share a spot on the hood of a green Fiat hatchback in the compound. One of them is Barre Muhammad Abdi, just 21, whose route to his damp and dirty mattress is nothing short of epic: he fled the warlords and bullet-chipped palaces of Mogadishu last year, crossed the Sahara and then paid $800 to sail from Libya in a boat of refugees north to Italy. Two people among the 140 died, he said, in four wandering days across the sea. "I came to Italy because I thought I would find a better life," he said in his native language. "I didn't find this good life." On a recent morning, Mr. Abdi was one of about 55 Somali refugees sleeping on the grounds of the disused embassy as the weather turned wet and sour. They slept inside a garage swept to remarkable tidiness, on an open patio packed two to a cot and in a hallway leading into the embassy's offices, the inside of which has been locked since Somalia's last stable government crumbled nearly 14 years ago. The embassy, the men's only alternative to the street, was relatively empty. A few weeks ago, 150 or more Somali men slept there, the refugees said. The women stay across town, in the consulate. Earlier this month, the men watched - along with all of Italy - as more than 1,000 other refugees made the journey on a single weekend from North Africa across the Mediterranean in crowded boats to the tiny Italian island of Lampedusa. The Italian government, seeking to discourage both human trafficking and more refugees from coming here, immediately bundled up most of them and flew them back to Libya, where many had begun their journey by sea. The move prompted quick denunciations from human rights groups, opposition politicians and the Roman Catholic Church. Under the Geneva Conventions and Italian law, the critics argue, people landing in Italy and claiming asylum have a right to have their cases heard, something that could not have happened with so quick a return to Libya. "Basically, they didn't take responsibility for the situation of these desperate people," said the Rev. Vittorio Nozza, director of the Italian branch of Caritas, a Roman Catholic aid group. "The response didn't give enough time to understand the circumstances of these people." In the embassy of Somalia - the very symbol of the faraway failed state whose disorder encroaches nonetheless on rich nations - the reaction among the men was more emotional. Nearly all of them had made the crossing themselves, endured rough seas and cheating middlemen, watched people die of starvation and from drinking sea water, then emerged to a life in Italy that had not been quite what they expected. A few, in fact, watched those sent from Italy with envy. "Some of the people in Libya call us and ask us, 'How are things there?' or they want to ask us, 'Do you think we should cross to Sicily?' " said Abdi Farah, 36, who came to Italy across the Mediterranean last year. "I say: 'Don't leave. There is nothing here for you.' " "I am very sorry for those who are arriving now," he added. "The Italian government doesn't treat refugees with humanity." In fact, human rights groups complain, the Italian government does almost nothing for refugees here - and that is why the Somalis are living at the embassy. Though the men have put in applications for asylum, cases can drag on for years, leaving them in a legal limbo. They are not permitted to work, though they say they would like to. Unlike in some other European countries, Italy does not provide them housing or permit them free study. So mostly they wait, socialize in a handful of Somali restaurants, eat on charity or from money earned by Somali women who clean houses or try their luck in more generous European nations. Then they are often shipped back to Italy. In just over a year, Mr. Farah has been expelled twice from England, once from Norway and, most recently, from Ireland in May. Since then, he has stayed at the embassy. "That is where we live," he said, standing on a patio barely protected from the sky and crammed with six musty cots and four sleeping bags on the ground, a few of them lumpy with sleepers inside. "The rain last night was bad. It has been quite some time that we have lived like this. We have no water, no electricity." There is one bathroom with only cold water, and the line can be two hours long. A few have prepaid cellphones, which they charge for free at a cafe down the street. A worker in the cafe and a few other neighbors said the Somalis were so quiet it seemed that not more than a half a dozen were staying there. They may be nearly invisible, but they are still reminders of both an unsolved problem in Europe and the extraordinary risks people will take, legal or not, to find a better life. Fuad Ahmad, 18, who says he wants to become a doctor, fled Mogadishu in 2003 because of the danger and the lack of schools. Like Mr. Abdi, he paid $800 to an Arab middleman to cross to Italy from Libya in October in one of two plastic boats lashed together carrying, he said, about 140 people. "The Arab man told us we would be in Italian territory in 24 hours," he said. "But that didn't happen." On the third day, the boats separated and two children on his boat died. On the fourth day, he said, a 30-year-old man drank sea water and died. Fifteen days after they left Libya, they were rescued, but 11 people had died along the way. The second boat, which he said set sail with 105 people on board, arrived with 13 bodies and only 15 survivors. The case filled Italians with guilt, and Italian politicians promised greater sympathy for migrants and an end to the treacherous crossings, which claim hundreds of lives each year. But Mr. Ahmad said he got no help. So he left for Sweden, where he said he began school. A few weeks ago, he was returned to Italy under a new law that requires asylum seekers to be returned to the country where they first entered Europe. He is now sleeping in the embassy grounds on a cardboard box with blankets plucked from the trash. "When I came here I was told that because I came through that disaster that I would be helped," he said. "It is very hard to live here. The cold weather is coming. And for a young person who would like to study and create a life, there are no possibilities." The Somali Embassy was closed in 1991, when civil war brought down the government of Mohammed Siad Barre, and over the years the cream-colored paint began to flake and the nation's blue flag faded, though it still flies. A net exporter of people until recent decades, Italy of late has begun to receive waves of migrants, first from Albania and Kosovo, then from Turkey and the Middle East and now from conflicts in Africa. About four years ago, Somalis with no other place to go began living in the embassy compound with its three permanent residents: a former driver, a security guard and the custodian. The population is never steady, residents say. The numbers swell in the summer when the weather is warm and people make the dangerous trip from Libya. But as the weather cools, many leave for elsewhere in Europe - colder than here, but more likely to provide a warm place to stay, until they are shipped back to Italy. "Very soon I will go to France, and ask for asylum there," said Ahmed Hajji Ali, 29, who came to Italy in 2003 and spent nine months last year in Norway. "I won't be on the street. I will have food. When the winter is over, they will send me back here." He said this was not the life he came to Europe for. He said he argued when some Somalis complained that Italy did not give them a place to stay, saying he did not want handouts. "If you have a job," Mr. Ali said, "you can have a house." For the conservative government of Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi, this movement from Italy to other European countries proves his government's central point: that Italy bears a disproportionate burden of migration given its closeness to Africa, and that there must be a unified European immigration policy. One such proposal is deeply dividing European governments: Italy, Britain and Germany support the establishment of so-called reception centers in North Africa so asylum cases can be processed outside Europe. Supporters say this would deter people from making the hazardous trip across the Mediterranean and would prevent loss of life at sea. Critics say this puts the best face on a policy that, in reality, would create camps that would allow Europe to distance itself from its legal obligations to provide asylum - and to, in effect, subcontract that obligation to nations without the same laws or respect for human rights. Critics also say it is unlikely to stop the most desperate from the world's worst places, people like Abuker Sheekh, 35, who crossed from Libya only three months ago. He knew life would be hard here. But comparing it with life in Somalia, he said he did not care. "Because there the issue is: when are you going to die?" said Mr. Sheekh, who had spent five nights at the embassy, sharing a small bed with a man whom he had never met. "Here I don't think about when I am going to die." Soon, it seems, Somalis here may even be deprived of their embassy. A new government has been formed in Mogadishu, and though other such attempts have failed before, Ahmed Sugulle Hersi, the Somali consul in Italy, said talks were already under way to reopen the embassy. He said this meant the refugees might have to leave the grounds, though not without some agreement with the Italian government "to solve the problem." Some, he said, may end up staying here legally. Others may go back to Somalia - but not anytime soon. "It's not safe there now," he said. "Eventually, when there is a peaceful Somalia, these people will want to go home." Jason Horowitz contributed reporting for this article. http://www.nytimes.com/2004/10/31/international/europe/31refugees.html?ex=1100331086&ei=1&en=ccd9ded8a43a9d74 --------------------------------- Get Home Delivery of The New York Times Newspaper. Imagine reading The New York Times any time & anywhere you like! Leisurely catch up on events & expand your horizons. Enjoy now for 50% off Home Delivery! 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