Flash News
The perpetrator of the murder in Ndroq has been identified, the incident is suspected to have happened for d*oge shopping
Murder in Ndroq/ The victim is identified, the perpetrator was driving a black "Benz".
Shots fired in Ndroq, one person is suspected of being killed
He shot with a Kalashnikov while terrorizing the residents, the 44-year-old man is arrested in Selenica
Zbulohet një bazë e prodhimit të vajit të kanabisit, arrestohet 35-vjeçari
REL: The court in Rome again takes a decision against the ban on immigrants in Albania
Judges in Rome have refused to approve the detention of a group of migrants in centers in Albania operated by Italy, sending the case to the European Court of Justice. The move represents a new blow to Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni's plan to send migrants to two reception centers, as the seven men involved in the case are expected to be transferred to Italy soon, AFP reported.
This is the second time the court in Rome has ruled against Meloni's plan. On October 18, judges rejected orders that a group of migrants be held in a reception center in Albania, saying they have the right to be sent to Italy.
Currently, only seven migrants – five from Bangladesh and two from Egypt – are in the reception center in Albania. The last migrant to return to Italy on November 9 was a person from Egypt, who was diagnosed with "psychological problems" and was therefore told that it was impossible to be kept in the center in Gjadera.
The group of eight migrants was the second to be sent to Albania since the reception centers began operating in October, under the agreement reached between Italy and Albania last year. The agreement allows up to 3,000 migrants - who are apprehended by the Italian coast guard in international waters each month - to be sent to Albania, where they will be evaluated for asylum in Italy, or return to their home countries.
Italy has agreed to welcome migrants who win asylum, while those whose asylum claims are rejected are directly deported from Albania. Italy initially sent a group of 16 migrants from Bangladesh and Egypt to Albania last month. Four of them returned to Italy on the same day because they were minors or had health problems.
The other twelve were turned back three days later, after a court in Rome ordered that they not be held in Albania because their countries of origin - Bangladesh and Egypt - were not safe countries. Prime Minister Meloni has updated the legal status of the list of safe places, making it a legal act rather than a ministerial decree, believing that this will make it more difficult for the courts to challenge its validity.
The five-year deal is said to cost Italy €160 million a year. According to the agreement, procedures for immigrants will be carried out in two centers. The first center in Shengjin will be used for immigrant identification procedures, while the second center, in Gjadër, about 20 kilometers from the port, will serve to house immigrants until asylum requests are processed. The centers will operate according to Italian law, with Italian security staff, while the judges will conduct the hearings via video link from Rome./ REL