(ANSA) - ROME, NOV 10 - The president of the Magistratura
Democratica left-wing faction in the judiciary's union, Silvia
Albano, one of the judges who nixed the detention of the first
group of migrants taken to a new Italian-run facility in
Albania, said on Sunday she did not want to clash with the
cabinet after the controversial sentence was slammed by leading
government members last month.
"I have no intention of seeking a clash with the government, it
is the government that wants to clash with me and I want to
avoid it", Albano said on the sidelines of the congress in Rome
of Magistratura Democratica, one of the factions within the
National Association of Magistrates (ANM).
"There has been an insufferable personalization.
"There are judges who are trying to do their jobs and a
unanimous opinion has been expressed by all communities of
jurists, from the Union of criminal chambers", which represents
Italian criminal lawyers, to "the associations of professors of
European Union law: they have all said nothing can be done on
the primacy of European legislation", said Albano, who was
assigned a security detail after receiving death threats in the
wake of the ruling.
Albano was among six judges who did not validate the detention
of the first group of migrants taken to Albania, stating that
their countries of provenance - Bangladesh and Egypt - could not
be considered safe based on an October 4 ruling of the European
Court of Justice.
The Rome court's ruling on October 18, which led to the migrants
being taken back to Italy from the newly opened centre, was
slammed by leading government members including Justice Minister
Carlo Nordio who described it as "abnormal" and said judges had
failed to fully understand the meaning of the European court's
sentence because it was very complex and "written in French".
After the ruling, the government on October 21 approved a new
decree listing 19 countries, including Egypt and Bangladesh, as
safe, saying courts cannot rule against it on the basis of the
European Court of Justice's decision.
The immigration section of Rome's tribunal is scheduled to
decide on Monday whether to validate the detention of the second
group of seven migrants - also citizens of Egypt and Bangladesh
- who were taken to the Italian-run centre in Albania by Italian
Navy vessel Libra last Friday.
Meanwhile on Sunday, Nordio expressed the hope that members of
the judiciary will cease to criticize the "political nature" of
laws and that policy makers will "tone it down" in criticizing
sentences, addressing via video link the congress of the faction
chaired by Albano.
"We want dialogue with the judiciary because we know that
magistrates are called to implement laws.
"Another problem is criticism of the political nature and
content of laws once they have been approved and (President
Sergio) Mattarella has been very clear about this", noted
Nordio.
"I hope that, in future dialogues, there will be increasingly
less criticism from members of the judiciary on the political
merit of laws in Parliament and that politicians will tone it
down in criticizing sentences", said Nordio.
The leader of the League party, Deputy Premier and Transport
Minister Matteo Salvini, said in a post published on X on Sunday
that some judges who "boycott" laws instead of applying them
should "get into politics with the Refounded Communists".
The post was published with a photo of Magistratura Democratica
President Silvia Albano.
"Those judges, luckily a few, who instead of applying laws
twist them and boycott them, should have the dignity to resign,
to change jobs and get into politics with the Refounded
Communists", wrote Salvini.
"They are a problem for Italy", said the League leader.
Meanwhile, at Magistratura Democratica's congress, the chairman
of the National Association of Magistrates (ANM), Giuseppe
Santalucia, said he was worried that a controversy between
members of the government and the judiciary sparked by court
rulings not validating the detention of asylum seekers could be
reignited by future sentences.
Speaking on the sidelines of the meeting, he noted that a
resurgence of the controversy wouldn't benefit anyone and
expressed trust that the rulings issued so far "can be read,
understood".
"It is possible to dissent or not, the word will now go to the
Court of Cassation and the (European Court) of Justice but there
is no intention of politicization or of igniting a clash with
political forces" said Santalucia, replying to a question
concerning potential future scenarios following Rome's ruling.
The decision was appealed by the interior ministry to the
Cassation Court.
Since the new government decree listing 19 safe countries for
repatriation was approved on October 21, two courts, one in
Bologna and another one in Palermo, have referred it with
another decree regulating accelerated border procedures to the
European Court of Justice to ask which parameter should be used
when determining safety and whether the principle of the primacy
of EU law should prevail if a conflict arises with Italian
legislation.
On Sunday, Santalucia also said the climate between the
judiciary and politicians had worsened since the governments of
late three-time premier and media mogul Silvio Berlusconi.
The ANM president noted that, previously, only prosecutors were
slammed as 'red judicial robes', or allegedly partisan
left-leaning magistrates, while "today the red judicial robes
are everywhere, even in civil courts dealing with immigration".
(ANSA).