Migration: Meloni is amazed at German financial aid for sea rescuers

migration
Meloni is amazed at German financial aid for sea rescuers

Olaf Scholz (r, SPD) with Giorgia Meloni in Berlin: The right-wing politician wrote a letter to the Chancellor. photo

© Bernd von Jutrczenka/dpa

The federal government wants to support aid organizations that look after migrants on Italian soil. Italy’s right-wing government sees this as interference in internal affairs.

Italy’s Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni expressed her astonishment at the dispute over German financial aid for civilian sea rescue organizations.

In a letter to Chancellor Olaf Scholz (SPD), the right-wing politician wrote that she was surprised to learn that the German government wants to financially support organizations that look after boat migrants in Italy, as Italian media reported. Meloni’s official residence confirmed the reports when asked. A spokesman for the federal government also confirmed that the letter had been received: “The letter will be answered.”

Funding determined by the Bundestag

Rome sees it as interference in domestic Italian affairs that the federal government wants to support aid organizations that look after migrants on Italian soil. The Foreign Office pointed out on Friday that this was implementing a decision by the Bundestag.

The first money – between 400,000 and 800,000 euros each – should be paid out “shortly” to a project for supply on land and a project for rescue at sea. One of the organizations is SOS Humanity. A spokesman for the Foreign Office emphasized: “It took some time until the various non-governmental organizations worthy of funding were selected. That has now happened, and the funding is now coming accordingly.” The funding was determined by the Bundestag.

Meloni: Not coordinated with the Italian government

The German support with significant resources from such organizations operating on Italian territory raises questions, Meloni continued in the letter, dated last Saturday. This was also not agreed with the Italian government. Instead, the EU states that are interested in concrete support for Italy should find more structural solutions, the head of government’s letter to Scholz continued. She mentioned, for example, the work on an EU initiative with the transit countries in North Africa.

The government in Rome had already taken an increasingly harsh tone against Berlin in the past few days. Italy’s Defense Minister Guido Crosetto spoke of “very serious” behavior. Like Meloni, Crosetto belongs to the ultra-right governing party Fratelli d’Italia.

dpa

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