(ANSA) - ROME, NOV 12 - Elon Musk's condemnation of Rome
judges who nixed the detention of a second batch of migrants
subjected to Italy's controversial policy of taking migrants to
be processed in Albania on Tuesday split Italian politics into
supporters and critics of the world's richest man and top Trump
supporter's intervention.
A clear majority of officials, however, viewed the magnate's
call for the judges to be removed as an unacceptable intrusion
in Italian domestic politics.
As a result of the Rome judges' decision the seven migrants, who
are citizens of Egypt and Bangladesh, were brought to the
Italian port of Brindisi early on Tuesday.
On October 18, the same court failed to validate the detention
of 12 migrants who were part of the first group to be taken to
Albania under the government's controversial agreement to run
migrant-centres on Albanian territory.
The fresh judicial blow to the Albania policy came despite the
government's bid to forestall such challenges by drafting a new
shorter list of 19 wholly safe countries, down from 22, and
again including Egypt and Bangladesh.
"These judges need to go," said Tesla, X and SpaceX owner Musk
via X on a user's post on the news of the suspension of the
validation of the detention of seven migrants decided by the
immigration section of the Court of Rome, which also referred
the case to the European Court of Justice, which has ruled that
neither Egypt nor Bangladesh are wholly safe.
Musk was a big supporter of Donald Trump's successful US
Presidential election campaign and he looks set to hold a
powerful position in the new administration.
It is the second time the outspoken multi-billionaire has spoken
out on Italian migration.
Last year Musk slammed Germany's policy of helping charities
that rescue migrants and take them to Italy's shores.
Among those who welcomed Musk's apparent call for the judges to
be removed from their posts was longtime Trump admirer,
rightwing League party leader, Deputy Premier and Transport
Minister Matteo Salvini, who had on Monday described the ruling
as "another political sentence against Italians," as he had
characterised the previous similar ruling as the work of
allegedly politically motivated "Communist" judges acting
against the interests of Italians and the safety of their
borders.
Salvini, who is the subject of a Palermo trial in which he is
accused of kidnapping 147 migrants by refusing to let them off a
Spanish NGO run rescue ship in Lampedusa for 19 days five years
ago as part of his controversial closed ports policy as then
hardline interior minister, said on X in English Tuesday: "Elon
Musk is right. On December 20, I could receive a 6-year prison
sentence for having blocked, as Minister of the Interior, the
landings of illegal immigrants. Seen from abroad, all this seems
even more incredible."
Salvini added:
"Musk's (statement) is not interference because from New York he
gave an assessment like many Americans do on both sides.
"If one of the seven illegal immigrants that we wanted to expel
because they were irregularly present in Italy - and who tonight
are free to walk our streets because some judge deemed Egypt not
to be a safe country, when New Year's Eve in Sharm costs you 5
thousand euros - tomorrow commits a crime and attacks another
citizen, whose fault is it? "Who is responsible for this less
security? Simply some judge who I believe brings his political
ideas to court and this is not normal".
But a minor ally of Premier Giorgia Meloni's rightwing Brothers
of Italy (FdI) party and the League, Maurizio Lupi of the We
Moderates group, said: "Elon Musk's words are inappropriate
because, even from abroad, they fuel a clash with the judiciary
that the Center-Right does not want."
FdI bigwig Fabio Rampelli said: "Judges who oppose our
repatriation policy are wrong. Both because they exceed their
duties, both because they politically interpret the ruling of
the European Court of Justice which says something completely
different, both because the States should speak to supranational
institutions and not the courts".
But he added: "However, we are equipped to defend ourselves. We
thank Elon Musk but we are not like the left, which drools to
amplify Italian critical issues at an international level,
ridiculing the nation. We will know how to make our arguments
prevail and this further attempt to favor immigration by the
Left and certain magistrates will make us rise even further in
the consensus of Italians".
The centre left opposition was predictably even more highly
critical of the tech tycoon's intervention.
MPs Angelo Bonelli of the Green-Left Alliance (AVS) and Andrea
Casu of the centre-left Dempcratic Party, the biggest opposition
group, asked Meloni to defend Italian democracy.
"An unacceptable interference and a serious problem for
democracy," said Bonelli.
"The Prime Minister is called to defend the Constitution and
democracy attacked by Musk" who "is in fact Trump's right-hand
man".
"Musk's attack on Italian judges is an intolerable
interference," said Casu.
"It is essential that the Prime Minister intervene and
demonstrate whether she is defending national sovereignty or
whether she is silently accepting this attack".
Italian Left (SI) leader Nicola Fratoianni said "I don't know if
the government will worry about defending sovereignty and
borders from Musk's interference this time".
Magistrates union ANM said Musk should respect Italy's judiciary
and jurisdiction.
"The hope is that there should be greater institutional respect
for the judiciary and jurisdiction," said ANM Secretary-General
Salvatore Casciaro.
"The invitation and the hope is that greater balance should also
be recovered in communication", he added.
Another ANM official said ANM said Italian magistrates must
defend themselves against Musk saying he undermined the
sovereignty of the Italian State.
"We are shocked by this intervention by a very powerful foreign
magnate," said the vice president of the National Association of
Magistrates, Alessandra Maddalena.
"Here the independence of the judiciary is no longer at stake,
but here it is a question of the sovereignty of the Italian
State. First of all we should think about this type of defense
and then that of jurisdiction".
Musk's man in Italy Andrea Stroppa said: "Article 21 (of the
Italian Constitution says) 'Everyone has the right to freely
express their thoughts through speech, writing and any other
means of dissemination'.
The Italian Constitution says everyone. Elon Musk can express
himself freely, get over it".
Meloni said after billionaire businessman turned reality TV star
and politician Trump's stunning comeback victory to a second
non-consecutive term, in which the tech tycoon gave out a
million dollars a day to prospective swing-state supporters,
that Musk is "an added value and potential interlocutor".
On September 23 Musk presented Meloni with the 'Global Citizen
Award 2024 from Washington-based think tank Atlantic Council,
praising her as "someone who is even more beautiful inside than
outside".
Musk said Meloni had done "an incredible job" as prime minister
with "record growth and employment".
"She is someone who is authentic, honest, truthful", added the
billionaire during a ceremony at the Ziegfeld Ballroom in
Manhattan.
Thanking Musk for his "precious genius", Meloni delivered a
passionate defence of Western values.
After feverish social media speculation over pictures of the
pair enjoying each other's company, Musk denied suggestions they
might be having an affair. (ANSA).