Christopher Livesay: These are the footsteps of people in search of a better
life. They’ve already traveled thousands of miles from Cameroon, Senegal, Côte
d’Ivoire, and Gambia. Now they’re attempting to cross the Alps, from Italy to
France, risking life and limb in freezing temperatures, on slippery ground.
They move at night, in order to evade detection. In this border region, it’s a
nightly occurrence. These young men are not used to the biting cold.
Christopher Livesay: These are the same migrants who risked their lives crossing
the scorching sands of the Sahara Desert, and then the treacherous waters of
the Mediterranean Sea. Now they’re risking their lives all over again, this
time, to cross the Alps.
Christopher Livesay: An estimated 10,000 people have crossed through this
treacherous mountain pass in the past year. Driving them is the chance at a
better future in more prosperous France, or other Northern European countries.
In the same period, aid groups in the Alps have rescued more than 5,000
migrants, some who lost limbs due to frostbite. Paolo Narcisi is a doctor and
the President of Rainbow For Africa, an Italian
charity that provides them with medical aid.
Paolo Narcisi:
Oftentimes they lose their way. And they take routes that are extremely
dangerous. Sometimes they go without proper winter clothing, or without having
ever seen snow before. We fear many have died in the process. Several bodies
have been found. But we’ll never know the true death toll. Because there are
wolves and foxes, animals that eat cadavers. When you fall into a crevasse
covered by snow, there’s no guarantee someone will find your body during the
spring thaw.
Christopher Livesay: To understand why migrants are taking such deadly risks, you
have to look back to 2015. At the time, France’s
borders were open to its neighbors, according to EU protocols. Then came
devastating terror attacks in Paris that killed 130 people. While most of the
attackers were French or Belgian citizens, investigators believe that at least
two of them posed as refugees to enter Europe. After the attacks, the borders
were closed. Then last spring, French police began cracking down on
undocumented crossings. Due to its rugged terrain, one area that police
couldn’t seal off completely was here in the Alps. But, migrants say, no matter
how bleak their prospects in France, they are even worse in Italy, where
anti-migrant sentiment has been building. A so-called “security law,” recently
passed by Parliament, doubles the time undocumented migrants can be detained,
and eliminates humanitarian grounds for granting asylum to migrants unless
they’re specifically running from political persecution or war. That means no
more asylum for victims of grave political instability, famine, or harsh
anti-gay laws in their home countries. The law was designed by Italy’s recently
elected Vice Premier and Interior
Minister:
Matteo Salvini. He’s also the leader of the
anti-migrant League party.
Matteo Salvini: You're not fleeing war. You're not
escaping torture. What do you have to do? Go back to your country. We already
have 5 million Italians living in poverty. So I can't
host hundreds of thousands of other people from the rest of the world.
Christopher Livesay: Having been denied asylum on humanitarian grounds, under
this new law, migrants are ineligible to access shelters. UN agencies fear that
thousands of migrants will end up on the streets. This as hate is on the rise.
Lunaria, an Italian civil society group recorded 126 racially motivated violent
crimes last year -- nearly triple those of 2017.
Paolo Narcisi:
Migrants were beginning to integrate. Many found jobs, or
were learning Italian and going to school. But now, out of fear, they want to
cross the border, fear of losing those few rights they had, and fear of the
changing political climate in Italy. At the same time
it pushes migrants out of the country, and wins votes for the League.
Riccardo Molinari: It’s exactly the opposite. Because we’re trying to manage
immigration in an orderly way.
Christopher Livesay: Riccardo Molinari is the House Whip in Parliament for Salvini’s League Party. He represents the place where
migrants are attempting their dangerous crossings, the Alpine region of
Piedmont that borders France.
Riccardo Molinari: Previously, the government pretended not to notice
migrants. So they hoped that these people would
eventually move on to Northern Europe. At a certain point, countries like
Austria and France began cracking down and closed their borders with Italy, and
we were stuck with the problem. These people kept coming, and our migration
system couldn’t handle it. So now we either have to either repatriate them, or keep them out.
Christopher Livesay: To keep them out, the new government has also closed
Italian ports to ships operated by private charities carrying migrants.
Riccardo Molinari: We blocked what was in fact an invasion of our country. We
had an influx of 200,000 people per year, the large part of which were illegal.
With the new government we tightened the screws, and
reduced migrant arrivals by 95%.
Christopher Livesay: But in the meantime you have
hundreds of thousands of migrants who are already here. Thousands of them have
already crossed through the French Alps. Some have even died or hurt themselves
very severely.
Riccardo Molinari: Obviously no one wants any harm to come to these people.
But the best way to save lives is to prevent migrants from coming in the first
place.
Christopher Livesay: As for those who are already in Italy, some, like these
migrants, are determined to get out. Most are originally from former French
colonies and speak French, something that didn’t help them in Italy, but they
hope will land them a job in France. Some are prepared. Others are not. One,
named Mory, says he’s afraid to show his whole face,
in case he gets caught.
Christopher Livesay: Why are you risking your life?
Mory: I’ve been living on the streets in
Naples. People are racist here.
Christopher Livesay: They agree to let us follow them on their journey from
Italy to France. A bus takes us just a few hundred yards from the border.
They’re stopped by Red Cross volunteers, and told to
turn back because of the physical danger.
Red Cross Worker: If people get hurt, we have to
take them back to Italy, of course.
Christopher Livesay: They ignore the warnings. But they don’t know the way. So these guys are completely lost. They don’t know which way
the French border is. They head offroad to avoid
being spotted. I’m pretty sure there’s the police coming right up behind us. Alihge Soso is originally from
Gambia. He tells me that on his way to Italy, passing through Libya, he was
arrested for illegal migration and abused while in detention in a migrant
camp.
Christopher Livesay: First you risked your life crossing the desert to Libya,
then you risked your life crossing the sea to go to Europe. And now you’re
risking your life to cross the mountains. It’s very, very dangerous. You’re
aware of this.
Alihge
Soso:
I know. I know.
Christopher Livesay: They wander onto a ski slope. And march into the unknown.
No map, no compass, no flashlight. Soon, they’ll have only the stars to light
their path. It’s roughly seven miles to the nearest town in France. But that’s
if you cross through the official checkpoint. Instead, they’ll have to wend
their way through icy peaks to avoid border patrol. They weigh their options.
Christopher Livesay: They want to turn around?
Alihge
Soso:
No, they want to.
Christopher Livesay: Eventually the risks become too great to continue filming.
It’s just getting way too dangerous. They’re climbing straight up a very, very
icy mountain that’s intended for skiers, not for people who are lost, which
includes me at this moment. We tell them we won’t be accompanying them further.
Migrants:
Ciao.
Christopher Livesay: Good luck. Okay?
Christopher Livesay: The next day, Italy’s Alpine Rescue squad scours the same
mountain for lost migrants.
Simone Bobbio: The major risk is hypothermia.
Because without the proper gear you are more exposed to cold.
Christopher Livesay: We decide to cross the border ourselves into Briancon, France, to see if they’ve survived. We check a
local migrant shelter. We find one of the migrants from the group, Issa Diale
from Côte d’Ivoire. He tells a doctor that the freezing hike was more dangerous
than he expected. He slipped and sprained his ankle.
Christopher Livesay: You’re okay? Despite this, you’re okay? Stai bene, tutto sommato?
Issa Diale:
Si, si.
Christopher Livesay: Some of the others went to the Briancon
train station hoping to get to Paris. We find two of them, including Alihge Soso.
Alihge
Soso:
The time I reach France, I thank God. I cry to God, “May God help us.”
Christopher Livesay: Alihge Soso
hopes to find a job in Paris. He has no money in his pocket, no education, and
he doesn’t speak French. And according to French law, there’s nothing stopping
authorities there from sending him back to Italy. Still, he thinks his chances
there are better. Both his parents recently died, he says, and his 10-year-old
sister back home in Gambia is counting on him.
Christopher Livesay: So you want to go to Paris, make
some money, and send it home for your sister?
Alihge
Soso:
If I make it. Because how happy I am, I want to make her happy also.
Christopher Livesay: Maybe that way, he says, she won’t have to go through the same journey he did.
|
TIMECODE |
LOWER THIRD |
1 |
00:38 |
CLAVIERE, ITALY CHRISTOPHER LIVESAY SPECIAL CORRESPONDENT |
2 |
1:18 |
DR. PAOLO NARCISI RAINBOW FOR AFRICA |
3 |
3:09 |
MATTEO SALVINI VICE PREMIER/INTERIOR MINISTER |
4 |
5:18 |
MATTEO SALVINI VICE PREMIER/INTERIOR MINISTER |