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ITALIAN CITIZENSHIP

True Italians: Music festival casts spotlight on children left waiting for citizenship

Children born to foreign parents in Italy must wait until they are 18 to apply for citizenship, and then have just one year to do so or face a years-long wait - a process some have described as a 'psychological violence'.

True Italians: Music festival casts spotlight on children left waiting for citizenship
Ghali Amdouni made waves by singing 'L'Italiano' at the Sanremo music festival in February. Photo by Arturo Holmes / Getty Images via AFP.

When rapper Ghali sang “I’m a true Italian” to 10 million television viewers last month, he spoke for hundreds of thousands of people born to immigrants in Italy who struggle to obtain citizenship.

The 30-year-old musician, born in Milan to Tunisian parents, sang a version of Toto Cutugno’s global hit “L’Italiano” (The Italian) at the Sanremo music festival, one of the biggest cultural events in Italy.

In doing so, Ghali – who was naturalised only at 18 – put the issue of the so-called “New Italians”, as second-generation immigrants are often known, centre stage.

Italy has one of the toughest citizenship regimes in Europe, with children born in the country to foreign parents unable to apply for an Italian passport until they are 18.

They have only one year to apply under a streamlined system, otherwise they must enter a costly and lengthy process, during which time they are left in limbo.

READ ALSO: ‘We’re Italian too’: Second-generation migrants renew calls for citizenship

“I feel Italian, I went to school here, Italian is the language I speak every day but I wasn’t a true Italian by law until I was 24, when I obtained citizenship,” said Daniela Ionita.

Now a spokeswoman for campaign group Italians Without Citizenship, she describes the failure to allow children to become citizens as “psychological violence”.

But she has little hope of a change in the law under the current hard-right government of Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni, whose deputy, Matteo Salvini, regularly rails against immigration.

Deputy Prime Minister Matteo Salvini regularly rails against immigration. Photo by Piero CRUCIATTI / AFP.

Blood ties

Italy has long been a country of emigration, not immigration, and has taken an approach to citizenship that helps maintain ties with this wide diaspora.

Nationality is based on blood ties, granted to those born to or adopted by Italian citizens.

Foreigners can obtain citizenship, most easily if they have Italian relatives or marry an Italian, but for most it is a long and difficult path.

“The law on access to citizenship in Italy is one of the toughest in Europe,” notes demographer Salvatore Strozza.

Children born and raised in Italy have no innate right to citizenship, except in rare cases where their parents are unknown or stateless.

READ ALSO: Will my children get an Italian passport if born in Italy?

They must wait until they become adults to apply, and then submit their application for citizenship between the ages of 18 and 19, with proof of uninterrupted residency in Italy.

If they miss that window, it becomes a complex bureaucratic process, which can take at least three years.

“It’s the longest administrative procedure in Italy,” said immigration lawyer Antonello Ciervo.

“An Argentine who has an Italian grandfather will be naturalised faster than a person born in Italy to foreign parents,” he told AFP.

For children who arrived in Italy at a young age, they must also wait until they are adults to secure citizenship, in the same way as other “foreigners”.

Someone born in a non-EU country must show 10 years of residency – compared with four for those born inside the bloc – and prove they have the means to support themselves.

At least 860,000 people born in Italy to foreign parents are currently eligible for naturalisation, of whom 95 percent are aged under 18, according to national statistics agency Istat.

Failed reform

Previous attempts to reform the current system, which dates to 1992, have failed – the most recent in 2022, just before Meloni took office.

Giorgia Meloni’s Brothers of Italy party has promoted the racist ‘Great Replacement’ theory. Photo by Andreas SOLARO / AFP.

Her far-right Brothers of Italy party is opposed to granting citizenship to those born here to foreign parents – and some members have raised the spectre of “ethnic replacement” of Italians by migrants, a concept promoted by white supremacists.

Meloni has focused instead on raising the birth rate in Italy, which has an ageing population.

Since her coalition came to power, several groups agitating for reform have paused their efforts.

“We are afraid that our efforts will be in vain or worse, that the naturalisation process will be lengthened” by the introduction of stricter checks, said Ionita.

“While waiting for a change in government, we are trying to change mentalities at a cultural and community level,” she added.

Some progress has been made on this front – Bologna, a bastion of the political left, in 2022 became the first commune to grant symbolic citizenship to all those born or raised in the northern Italian city.

“First we need to change the concept of who is an Italian within society, and then we can look to a change at the political level,” added Deepika Salhan, a member of another campaign group, “On the right side of history”.

By AFP’s Lucile COPPALLE and Gael BRANCHEREAU

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ITALIAN CITIZENSHIP

Did you know…? Italy has one of the world’s most powerful passports

Italy is renowned as one of the world's top tourist destinations, but less well known is that holding an Italian passport also gives you privileged access to a host of other countries.

Did you know...? Italy has one of the world’s most powerful passports

From Marco Polo to Christopher Columbus and Amerigo Vespucci, Italy has produced some world-famous explorers and navigators down the centuries – so it seems fitting that Italians have one of the world’s strongest passports today.

According to VisaGuide.World’s 2024 Passport Index, which ranks 199 countries’ passports according to a range of factors, Italy has the world’s second most powerful passport after Singapore.

READ ALSO: How foreigners can get ‘fast track’ citizenship in Italy

It’s followed by Spain, France and Germany, with Hungary, Austria, Ireland, the Netherlands and Belgium rounding out the top ten.

The score is based on criteria including how many countries the passport allows you to travel to without a visa, whether a destination allows you to buy a visa on arrival, and whether any countries have blacklisted your passport altogether.

An Italian passport allows you to travel to 161 countries visa-free, 44 countries with only an ID card, and 20 countries on an e-Visa (which can be bought online).

READ ALSO: Did you know…? There’s an Italian region that doesn’t exist

By comparison, a Singaporean passport will get you into 167 countries and territories without a visa, and a US passport, all the way down in 39th place, into 151.

A powerful passport is a nice perk of being an Italian national – but if you’re not born Italian and don’t have Italian ancestry, Italy doesn’t make it easy to acquire citizenship.

READ ALSO: Will my children get an Italian passport if born in Italy?

You’ll need ten years of uninterrupted residency in Italy to naturalise or two years of marriage to an Italian citizen (three, if you live abroad) before you’re eligible to begin the application process, which can take years.

Find out more about applying for an Italian passport.

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