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Italy's Meloni vows to press on with Albania migrant camp scheme

Published by Global Banking & Finance Review

Posted on November 13, 2025

2 min read

· Last updated: January 21, 2026

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ROME (Reuters) -Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni said on Thursday that her government was "determined" to continue sending sea migrants to Albania, despite judicial opposition to the scheme.

Italy's Meloni Reaffirms Commitment to Migrant Camps in Albania

Italy's Migrant Camp Initiative Overview

By Angelo Amante

Background of the Albanian Camps

ROME (Reuters) -Italy's Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni on Thursday vowed to relaunch a plan to detain migrants in Albania, a flagship initiative of her conservative government that has been blocked by judges.

Legal Challenges and Future Prospects

Italy and Albania signed a protocol in 2023 to take migrants caught at sea to Albania and screen their asylum requests there, in the first such deal between a European Union country and one from outside the bloc.

Impact of EU Court Rulings

The scheme stalled almost immediately, after Italian courts ordered migrants to be returned to Italy, citing issues with EU law.

Expert Opinions on Implementation

The EU's top court in August also ruled against the Rome government in another blow to the plan, but Meloni is confident the Albanian camps will be operational from mid-2026 when new EU rules on immigration and asylum are due to come into force.

"Many have worked to slow it down or block it, but we are determined to move forward because this mechanism has the capacity to change the entire (migration) paradigm," Meloni told a press conference in Rome with her Albanian counterpart Edi Rama.

ALBANIAN CAMPS LARGELY EMPTY

Italy hoped the Albanian camps would process and largely reject the requests of some 36,000 male asylum seekers per year, but they have been largely empty since opening in October 2024.

Since the migrants due to be taken to Albania are supposed to come from a government-drafted list of safe countries, the expectation was that most of their asylum requests would be rejected.

Meloni sees the entire scheme as a disincentive for migrants seeking to enter Italy via the Mediterranean.

After judges prevented the use of the camps as originally intended, Italy turned them into repatriation hubs for failed asylum seekers. Media reports said only a few hundred people have occupied them.

One analyst warned that legal obstacles could remain even after the new EU rules come into force, given the "exceptional" legal status of Italian-run migrant detention facilities based in a foreign country.

"I expect that even if they were to become fully operational, appeals would continue," Luca Barana, a migration expert at the Institute for International Affairs, told Reuters.

(Reporting by Angelo Amante, editing by Alvise Armellini and Ed Osmond)

Key Takeaways

  • Italy plans to detain migrants in Albania.
  • The initiative faces legal challenges from EU courts.
  • Meloni is determined to proceed with the plan.
  • Albanian camps remain largely empty.
  • New EU rules may impact the scheme by 2026.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is a migrant camp?
A migrant camp is a temporary facility where individuals seeking asylum or refuge are housed while their applications are processed.
What is asylum?
Asylum is a form of international protection given to individuals in another country due to persecution or fear of persecution in their home country.
What is an EU court ruling?
An EU court ruling is a legal decision made by the Court of Justice of the European Union, which interprets EU law and ensures its equal application across member states.

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