Migration News

How one couple saved nearly $3,000 a month by moving to Italy

In travel news this week: how to get the Italian lifestyle when you don’t have a billionaire’s budget, plus we reveal CNN’s pick of America’s Best Towns to Visit in 2025. Only 10 made our list: Did somewhere near you make the cut?

La Dolce Vita

Money can’t buy you love, but it can get you a mammoth celebration of matrimony and mammon that has the whole world talking.

All eyes are on Venice this week for Amazon founder Jeff Bezos and Lauren Sanchez’s big-bucks big day, an event mired in controversy as protesters rail against the damage done to their city by overtourism.

However, you don’t need a net worth of $263 billion to enjoy the dolce delights of the Italian lifestyle, or the sweet highs of amore, as our CNN Travel picks this week will show.

The Smarrellis, from Syracuse, New York, were in Venice for their 50th wedding anniversary when they decided to quit the US and move to a coastal town in Calabria, southern Italy.

They told CNN their living costs have dropped by nearly $3,000 a month since making the move. “It was a good choice,” said Tony Smarrelli.

We first reported on rural Italian towns selling one-euro homes back in 2019, as a savvy way to revitalize dwindling communities.

The most successful of the schemes has been in Sicily’s Sambuca di Sicilia, aka “Italy’s Little America,” but while Americans kickstarted the town’s resurrection, young Italians are now grabbing up homes for themselves too.

“Why leave such opportunities to foreigners?” 25-year-old Sicilian Paolo Morabito told CNN.

Chance Encounters

Season two of our “Chance Encounters” podcast launched on Friday, bringing you a summer’s worth of true stories of friendship and romance formed while traveling.

CNN’s Francesca Street presents the series based on her hit column of the same name.

The first new episode follows Catherine Tondelli, a Californian woman who met her Italian husband, Fausto, in front of Rome’s Trevi Fountain right after she threw three coins into the fountain’s waters and made a wish.

There are also six episodes to catch up on from season one, such as the tale of Rachel Décoste who traveled to Benin in West Africa, anticipating a life-changing experience.

She jumped on the back of local man Honoré Orogbo’s motorbike and the trip changed her life in more ways than she ever could have imagined.

In this Unlocking the World roundup we promised you love and we promised you thriftiness. Our partners at CNN Underscored, a product reviews and recommendations guide owned by CNN, have some tips that cover both.

Emily McNutt booked her $18,584 honeymoon business-class flights from the US to Southeast Asia for less than $200. Here’s how she did it.

Also returning this week is CNN Travel’s second annual list of America’s Best Towns to Visit. After considering hundreds of nominations from our readers and contributors, our editors whittled those down to this year’s magic 10.

Our choices range in size from about 15,000 residents to about 115,000. They’re spread across the United States and capture the remarkable variety that defines the country — from culture and food to history and outstanding natural beauty.

Each of these towns is testament to how Americans can build towns and communities that add up to more than the sum of their parts.

Our No.1 for 2025 is Ithaca, New York,a lively college town with an outsize number of cultural offerings for its modest scale.

There’s plenty of natural “wow factor” as the area around Ithaca is filled with gorges and cascading falls, while refreshment awaits in the many wineries and cider houses in New York’s Finger Lakes region.

Two people rescued after going overboard on Disney cruise ship

 

Two guests, said to be a father and his young daughter, have been rescued by crew after going into the water while onboard the Disney Dream cruise ship as it returned from a voyage around the Bahamas.

Disney confirmed that the rescue happened on June 29, saying that both were returned to the ship within minutes of entering the water.

Social media posts from customers on board reported that the pair were a father and his young daughter. The father is said to have jumped in to rescue his daughter after she fell from the ship. It’s unclear how she ended up overboard.

“The crew aboard the Disney Dream swiftly rescued two guests from the water,” Disney said in a statement to CNN.

“We commend our Crew Members for their exceptional skills and prompt actions, which ensured the safe return of both guests to the ship within minutes. We are committed to the safety and well-being of our guests, and this incident highlights the effectiveness of our safety protocols.”

The ship was returning to Fort Lauderdale, Florida, after a four-night cruise in the Bahamas, Newsweek reported, citing Disney officials.

Illegal Migration Bill: Jenrick sees no more compromises on migration bill

The government does not expect to make compromises on plans to remove people arriving in the UK illegally, says immigration minister Robert Jenrick.

The House of Lords has voted to overturn several parts of the Illegal Migration Bill – which ministers hope to pass before the summer recess.

The bill would place a legal duty on the government to detain and remove those arriving in the UK illegally.

It is key to Rishi Sunak’s attempts to stop small boat crossings.

In the face of staunch opposition in the Lords, the government agreed to changes to the treatment of children and pregnant women.

But speaking to BBC Radio 4’s Today programme, Mr Jenrick said no new compromises would be made.

“It’s not a serious or grown-up way to conduct a debate to say, ‘we don’t want this, we don’t want that’, and not to come up with an alternative,” he said.

“The UK has the most comprehensive plan to tackle illegal migration of any European country.”

Shadow Home Secretary Yvette Cooper, also speaking to Today, said the bill was “a con that will makes things worse”.

The government has “lost common sense and lost common decency,” and are “undermining the proper approach we should be taking,” she said.

MPs are expected to reverse changes made to the bill in the Lords but the draft legislation will then return to the upper chamber.

The standoff continues with time running out for the plans to be approved before Parliament’s summer break begins next Thursday.

The bill, backed by MPs in March, is central to Mr Sunak’s high-profile pledge to “stop” small boats crossing the English Channel.

It would place a legal duty on the government to detain and remove those arriving in the UK illegally either to Rwanda or another “safe” third country.

The government says it is committed to its plan to remove migrants to Rwanda, despite the Court of Appeal ruling it was unlawful. On Thursday, it was given the go-ahead to appeal the ruling at the Supreme Court.

There has been concern about how children will be treated under the new migration bill, as well as accusations that existing UK regulations to prevent modern slavery would be undermined.

Although the legal duty to deport migrants would not apply to under-18s the bill would give ministers new powers to deport them in certain circumstances and detain them for extended periods.

It would also extend the limit on how long children could be detained before applying for bail from three days to eight. A previous version of the bill proposed allowing children to be detained without the ability to apply for bail for up to 28 days.

 

Boundless Immigration News Weekly Recap: December 16, 2022

USCIS Announces Trial For New Citizenship Test

USCIS announced Wednesday it will conduct a trial of a new naturalization test for citizenship applicants.

The naturalization test consists of two parts: a reading, writing and speaking test, and a civics test that evaluates the applicant’s knowledge of U.S. history and government.

The trial will focus on the speaking and civics tests and will involve 1,500 adult participants. It’s expected to take place over 5 months in 2023.

USCIS Releases Annual Report

USCIS released its annual progress report for FY2022. While there’s still a lot of work to be done to reduce the backlog, the agency did have a few notable achievements this year, including welcoming nearly 1 million new U.S. citizens and reducing the naturalization backlog by 62%, extending the EAD validity period for over 400,000 noncitizens whose work permits had expired during COVID, making more H-2B work visas available, and issuing all available employment-based immigrant visas, double the number before the pandemic.

Biden Administration Faces Backlash Over Post-Title 42 Border Plans

Democratic lawmakers called on DHS to stop punitive measures at the U.S.-Mexico border. In a letter addressed to DHS Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas, 21 Democrats spoke out against the Biden administration’s plans to quell border crossings with repressive policies.

Rumors are circulating that the Biden administration plans to roll out new border policies that would largely mimic those of the Trump administration and make it more difficult for migrants to seek asylum at the southern border.

In their letter, Democrats urged the Biden administration to avoid the rumored policies and instead bolster the country’s asylum system by protecting migrants impacted by Title 42.

Biden Administration Restarts Task Force to Help New Immigrants

The Biden administration is restarting a task force to help immigrants and refugees assimilate into the U.S.

The Task Force on New Americans will focus on workforce development, language training, and financial access, among other initiatives.

The task force was created in 2006 by President George W Bush but lapsed under the Trump administration.

Pope visits immigrant father’s hometown for birthday party

PORTACOMARO, Italy (AP) — Pope Francis made a rare personal getaway Saturday, returning to his father’s birthplace in northern Italy for the first time since ascending the papacy to celebrate the 90th birthday of a second cousin who long knew him as simply “Giorgio.”

Francis’ two-day visit to his ancestral homeland underscored some of the keystones of his papacy, including the importance of honoring the elderly and the human toll of migration. The private visit Saturday will be followed by public one Sunday to celebrate Mass for the local faithful, where Francis could well reflect on his family’s experience migrating to Argentina.

The pope’s father, Mario Jose Francisco Bergoglio, and his paternal grandparents arrived in Buenos Aires on Jan. 25, 1929 to reach other relatives who had joined the tail end of a mass decades-long emigration from Italy that the pope has honored with two recent saints: St. Giovanni Batista Scalabrini and St. Artedime Zatti.

The future pope, Jorge Mario Bergoglio, was born nearly eight years later in Buenos Aires, after the elder Bergoglio met and married Regina Maria Sivori, whose family was also of Italian immigrant stock. Francis grew up speaking the Piedmont dialect of his paternal grandmother Rosa, who cared for him most days.

The elder Bergoglio was born in the town of Portacomaro, 10 kilometers (6 miles) east of Asti, an agricultural town that lost population not only to emigration abroad but also to nearby Turin as it became an industrial center.

Today, the town has 2,000 residents, but it numbered more than 2,700 a century ago, and dropped as low as 1,680 in the 1980s.

The pope’s family emigrated after the peak, which saw 14 million Italians leave from 1876 to 1915 — a movement that made Italy the biggest voluntary diaspora in the world, according to Lauren Braun-Strumfels, an associate professor of history at Cedar Crest College in Allentown, Pennsylvania.

Often citing his own family story, Francis, now 85, has made the welcoming and integration of migrants a hallmark of his papacy, often facing criticism as Europe in general, and Italy in particular, are consumed with the debate over how to manage 21st century mass migration.

The pope has recognized the historic significance of the emigrant experience with the recent canonizations of St. Giovanni Battista Scalabrini, an Italian bishop who founded an order to help Italian emigrants at the end of the 19th century, and Artemide Zatti, an Italian who emigrated to Argentina in the same period and dedicated his work to helping the sick.

He used the occasion to again denounce Europe’s indifference toward migrants risking their lives to cross the Mediterranean Sea and what they hope will be better futures.

Francis began his visit to Portacomaro on Saturday with lunch at the home of a cousin, Carla Rabezzana. Photographs released by the Vatican showed Francis clearly enjoying himself, hugging Rabezzana and sitting at the head of the table. He later visited another cousin nearby, stopping at a nursing home along the way to greet and bless the guests.

“We have known each other forever,” Rabezzana told the Corriere della Sera newspaper in the runup to the visit. “When I lived in Turin, Giorgio — I always called him that — came to stay because I had an extra room. That is how we maintained our relationship.

“We always would joke. When he told me he would come to celebrate my 90th birthday, I said it made my heart race. And in response I was told: ‘Try not to die.’ We burst out laughing.”

The pope has many more third and fourth cousins still in the area.

“It was a large family, and in the area there are still many distant cousins,” said Carlo Cerrato a former mayor of Portacomaro. He said it was a “big surprise” for everyone in the town when Francis was elected pope nearly a decade ago.

“Everyone knew there was a prelate who had become the cardinal of Buenos Aires, but it was something that the relatives knew, not everyone in town,” Cerrato said.

After nearly 10 years as pope, Francis has yet to return to his own birthplace in Argentina . He hasn’t really explained his reasons for staying away. He recently confirmed that if he were to resign as pope, he wouldn’t go back to Buenos Aires to live but would remain in Rome.

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AP News

EU countries have relocated just 117 asylum seekers out of 8,000 pledges

The EU-wide relocation system launched in June and touted as a major step forward in the reform of migration policy has so far resulted in 117 asylum seekers being transferred across the bloc – out of an annual target that envisions 8,000 pledges.

“We’re working very closely with all member states to ensure that we have in place a common solution,” a European Commission spokesperson said on Monday while announcing the numbers.

“I know this number doesn’t seem like a lot but we need to keep in mind that we have 8,000 pledges as such.”

The low figures come as asylum applications reach highs not seen since the 2015 migration crisis. August alone saw 84,500 requests lodged, with Afghans and Syrians leading the count.

The gradual rise in border crossings is fuelling tensions between EU countries, who continue to disagree on a common migration policy to manage new arrivals.

Relations between France and Italy have deteriorated over the disembarkation of the Ocean Viking, a ship that Rome did not allow to disembark despite its obligation under international law.

The vessel, operated by the humanitarian organisation SOS Méditerranée, had 234 people on board, including 57 children. Some of them had been stranded on the vessel for 19 days, raising fears of loss of life.

French Interior Minister Gérald Darmanin called Italy’s actions “inhumane” and “incomprehensible,” arguing the vessel was in Italian waters and was therefore required to disembark somewhere in Italy.

Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni said she was struck by the “aggressive reaction” from Paris, which she deemed “incomprehensible and “unjustified.”

Under current EU rules, asylum applications have to be processed by the first country of entry. By refusing arrival, a state can forgo such responsibility and pass it on to another country.

In a bid to strike a more balanced and predictable system, 18 EU countries, together with Norway, Switzerland and Liechtenstein, signed in late June a declaration launching the Voluntary Solidarity Mechanism (VSM).

Austria, Denmark, Poland and Hungary were among those who turned down the initiative.

The joint statement lays out a brand-new scheme to enable the transfer of asylum seekers from Southern countries to other states across the bloc.

It only applies to people in need of international protection who arrive via the Mediterranean route, giving priority to those considered “most vulnerable.” This would exclude certain nationalities, such as Indian, Moroccan and Turkish, whose applications have broken records in recent months.

‘Unequal notion of solidarity’

Upon its signature, the voluntary mechanism, promoted by France during its six-month presidency of the EU Council, was hailed as a “historic agreement” and a potential prelude to a permanent and efficient relocation system, one of the main priorities pursued by the European Commission and southern EU countries.

The mechanism works on the basis of national pledges, which are designed according to population, GDP and political priorities.

Each country commits to either host asylum seekers or provide financial support to those who do.

Out of the 21 countries who participate in the scheme, 13 have made relocation pledges, with the majority coming from France and Germany, while the others have chosen to offer financial assistance instead.

In total, countries have committed to relocating 8,000 asylum seekers between June 2022 and June 2023.

An internal document leaked by the research NGO State Watch revealed that a “political goal” that initially sought to relocate 3,000 people by the end of the year had been downgraded to a more feasible target of 1,000 people. A European Commission spokesperson refused to comment on the targets but did not deny them.

But according to the EU executive’s latest update, just 117 relocations have been completed by mid-November, amounting to a mere 1.46% of the annual 8,000 objective.

As the mechanism is entirely voluntary and not legally binding, the European Commission is unable to enforce the compliance of national pledges. The European Parliament and the European Court of Justice are equally excluded from carrying out oversight.

The system also has an opt-out clause that countries can invoke to halt relocations if they consider their migration systems to be under “disproportionate pressure.”

Experts have criticised the scheme for its absence of legal foundations and the selectiveness inherent in the relocation process, which allows states to decide who to welcome and who to reject.

An analysis by the Centre for European Policy Studies (CEPS) said the scheme was fraught with a “profound lack of foreseeability and predictability” and gave preference to an “intergovernmental, asymmetric and unequal notion of solidarity.”

Despite the criticism and the low results achieved so far, the European Commission defends the mechanism as a temporary solution to ease the burden of southern EU countries and manage the issue of disembarkations.

Following the Ocean Viking incident, French Interior Minister Gérald Darmanin said nine European countries had committed to hosting two-thirds of the rescued migrants, with the remaining third staying in France.

“France has launched a call of solidarity to member states and others have responded positively,” said a Commission spokesperson.

 

euronews

Some Venezuelan couples separated under new U.S.-Mexico migrant policy

MEXICO CITY/CIUDAD JUAREZ, Mexico (Reuters) – A new U.S.-Mexico border policy geared at deterring Venezuelans fleeing hardship in their home country from entering the United States illegally has separated some families, migrants said on Friday, with several women known to have been sent back to Mexico as their husbands stayed on in the United States.

The separations of at least three married couples, as well as a mother returned without her 20-year-old son, occurred during some of the first expulsions of Venezuelans from the United States back to Mexico under the policy announced by officials from the two countries on Wednesday.

Under the policy, up to 24,000 Venezuelans may apply for humanitarian entry into the United States by air. U.S. authorities have said they will turn back Venezuelans who attempt to enter at the land border.

About 200 Venezuelans who had crossed by land into the United States were expelled on Thursday to Mexico’s Ciudad Juarez, according to the Jesuit Migrant Services rights group. U.S. officials told Reuters that 300 had been expelled border-wide from the United States the day before.

Before Wednesday, Venezuelans who crossed illegally into the United States, many seeking U.S. asylum, were often allowed to stay because it was difficult to send them back to Venezuela or Mexico.

Afghan refugees camp out in Brazilian airport in search of new life

SAO PAULO, Oct 14 (Reuters) – Blankets and luggage carts have become the makeshift homes to more than a hundred Afghan migrants in Sao Paulo’s international airport, serving as a temporary shelter for refugees after their year-long odyssey since the Taliban returned to power.

Brazil has approved about 6,000 humanitarian visas for Afghan refugees since late last year. But local authorities near Sao Paulo’s Guarulhos airport said they had little idea there would be dozens of Afghans arriving daily this month.

Hundreds of Venezuelan migrants leave southern Mexico to travel to U.S. border

Venezuelan migrants, expelled from the U.S. and sent back to Mexico under Title 42, walk near the Lerdo Stanton International border bridge, in Ciudad Juarez, Mexico October 13, 2022. REUTERS/Jose Luis Gonzalez/File Photo

TAPACHULA, Mexico, Oct 14 (Reuters) – Hundreds of migrants set off from Mexico’s southern border early on Friday on a northward journey to the U.S.-Mexico border where hundreds of others are stranded following a deal to expel Venezuelan migrants crossing into the United States.

The group of people departed around 4 a.m. from the city of Tapachula, near Mexico’s border with Guatemala, en route to San Pedro Tapanatepec in Mexico’s Oaxaca state, where migrants can acquire permits to cross the country.