ROME, Italy
Italian Premier Giorgia Meloni opened the Italy-Africa summit on Monday (Jan. 29) aimed at unveiling Italy’s development plan for the continent, which the government hopes will stem migration flows.
Overall, 155,754 people
arrived on Italian shores last year, more than half of them Africans.
In attendance at the Rome
summit were over 20 African leaders including William Ruto of Kenya, top
European Union and United Nations officials as well as representatives from
international lending institutions.
The Italian plan is named
after Enrico Mattei, founder of state-controlled oil and gas giant Eni.
Italy seeks to become the
natural energy supply hub for the whole of Europe. The EU banned Russian energy
supplies following the war in Ukraine.
The Mattei plan also seek
cooperation with Africa beyond energy.
It involves pilot projects in
areas such as education, health care and agriculture.
Meloni said Italy would set
aside an initial 5.5 billion euros ($5.95 billion) for the plan, including
public guarantees for investment projects and 3 billion euros from a climate
fund set up in 2021.
Speaking of migrants, the
Meloni said: "human traffickers will never be defeated, if the causes that
push a person to abandon their home are not addressed upstream."
“The medium and long-term
objective is to demonstrate how aware we are that the fate of our continents is
interconnected," Meloni said as she pushed for a relationship of
"equals, far from any predatory temptation but also from that charitable approach
in the approach to Africa."
"Our future inevitably
depends on the future of the African continent,” she added in her speech.
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