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http://english.aljazeera.net/programmes/witness/2010/07/201072275932293494.html

 Monday, July 26, 2010 
16:33 Mecca time, 13:33 GMT 

 
      FOCUS: WITNESS  
     
      Shukri: A New Life  
     
       By Rossella Schillaci  


 
      FOCUS: WITNESS  
     
      Shukri: A New Life  
     
       By Rossella Schillaci 
     
      Thirty-one-year old Shukri left her four children in Somalia in 2008, 
walked across North Africa and risked a hazardous raft trip across the 
Mediterranean to seek a better life in Europe.

      She is one of thousands of such migrants who attempt the journey each 
year and although she has been given refugee status in Italy her future still 
looks bleak.

      Filmmaker Rossella Schillaci followed Shukri and in the following account 
describes the realities of her life - and those of thousands of others.

      In the winter of 2008, over 400 Somali and Sudanese refugees squatted in 
an abandoned building that had once housed a medical clinic in downtown Turin, 
northern Italy.

      The Italian government's indifference towards refugees left them with 
little alternative. Once refugees are issued a sojourn permit, they are left to 
fend for themselves, with just a few receiving temporary housing and education. 
Many rely on Catholic volunteer relief associations for help, but these cannot 
provide housing and the waiting lists for dormitories seem endless.

      Many refugees live and sleep on the streets. In larger cities, they squat 
in old buildings or abandoned factories, enduring overcrowded and grim living 
conditions often without water or electricity.

      A better life

           
            Like Shukri, Hindiyo left her family behind in Somalia 
      Shukri lives on the second floor of the abandoned medical clinic in 
Turin. There is no heating, one water tap for every 80 people, and the 
squatters rely on local charities for food.

      Like her housemates, she arrived in Italy after crossing the Sahara and 
the Mediterranean with the dream of building a better life in Europe.

      She decided to make the dangerous journey to escape war-torn Somalia, 
where life seemed impossible.

      So in February 2008, after divorcing her husband, Shukri left her four 
children with her mother and headed to Ethiopia.

      She eventually travelled to Italy by boat - or as she describes it, by 
balloon; a rubber raft so worn out that it could be punctured by a fingernail. 
She knew the journey would be a matter of life and death and the vastness of 
the sea scared her when she was about to embark in Tripoli. But still she had 
to go.

      When she was in Somalia she believed - like many others - that Italy was 
one of the most beautiful places in the world. She had heard stories of other 
Somali women finding work there that had enabled them to support their families 
back home and even to buy houses.

      But soon after arriving she realised that life in Italy was not as she 
had imagined. She had wanted to work and be independent so that she could build 
a decent life that would enable her to support her family. Instead she was 
forced to live on subsidies.

      She learned Italian and trained as a care-giver because she had been told 
that it would be easy to find work caring for the elderly or disabled.

      Shortly after arriving in Turin, Shukri became friends with Hindiyo, 
another Somali woman who had also left her family behind. They became like 
sisters, living together and sharing everything.

      Hindiyo often thought about her hungry children and sick parents back in 
Somalia and felt guilty that she had not been able to send money home as she 
promised. The guilt was so bad that she often could not sleep at night.

      Against the odds

           
            Shukri expected it to be much easier to start a new life in Italy 
      Now, after two years little has changed. 'Emergency' measures rather than 
longer-term solutions are still employed to deal with the refugees.

      Many refugees have "escaped" Italy in search of a better life in other 
European countries, although they know that if the authorities elsewhere 
discover that their fingerprints were taken in Italy they will be sent back.

      After having temporary jobs as caregivers in a small mountain village 
where they were the only Muslims, Shukri and Hindiyo are again without work.

      When they were working they had been able to send money home but that has 
stopped now. Their families are disappointed and find it hard to believe that 
life in Italy could really be so hard.

      But Shukri and Hindiyo are not giving up. They are still looking for work 
and hoping to build better lives. Shukri has realised that she cannot expect to 
get an office job, but now it is hard to get even a caregiver job as people are 
asking for driving licenses and a car.

      With the ongoing war in Somalia, Shukri doubts that she will ever return 
and hopes to find a permanent job that will help her save her children and 
mother.
     
     




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