European leaders to ask EU for easier expulsion
23/5/2025 6:19
Nine European countries,
led by Italy and Denmark, will on Thursday call on the European
Union to make it simpler for member states to expel foreign
criminals, according to a letter seen by Reuters.
European governments have expressed frustration with how
the European Court of Human Rights uses the European Convention
on Human Rights to block deportations and they want to see it
revised.
The letter, which was prepared ahead of a meeting on
Thursday between Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni and
Denmark's Mette Frederiksen, urges the EU to review how courts
interpret the convention.
"We have seen cases concerning the expulsion of criminal
foreign nationals, where the interpretation of the Convention
has resulted in the protection of the wrong people and posed too
many limitations on the states' ability to decide whom to expel
from their territories," the letter said.
Member states should "have more room nationally to decide on
when to expel criminal foreign nationals," it said.
The letter was signed by the leaders of Denmark, Italy,
Austria, Belgium, the Czech Republic, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania
and Poland.
Meloni and Frederiksen are scheduled to hold a joint press
conference in Rome on Thursday.
Meloni's conservative bloc won power in 2022, vowing to
crack down on migration. Denmark has introduced increasingly
harsh immigration policies over the past decade.
|