Madrid - The Spanish parliament Thursday approved a
controversial plan to encourage immigrants to return home amid rising
unemployment.
The offer provides for jobless immigrants to be paid their
unemployment benefit in advance, if they go back to their countries
and agree not to return to Spain for three years.
More than 100,000 immigrants could take up the offer, but no more
than 10,000 were expected to do so.
The plan was approved while unemployment continued rising for the
sixth consecutive month, surpassing 2.6 million, according to
new figures released by the government.
Labour and Immigration Minister Celestino Corbacho estimated
unemployment among immigrants at 16 per cent, compared to 11 per cent
for the general population.
Immigrants have been hit hard by the crisis of the key
construction sector, which employed many migrant workers.
Corbacho meanwhile elicited criticism by proposing that immigrants
would not be allowed to bring their parents to Spain before having
lived there for five years, up from the current one-year limit.
Such plans were another attempt to curtail the rights of
immigrants in Spain and the European Union, said Virginia Alvarez of
the human rights group Amnesty International.
Corbacho earlier sparked a political row by linking immigration to
unemployment and by declaring that hardly any visas would be granted
to migrant workers. He then retracted his statements.
Spain has nearly 5 million legal immigrants, as well as hundreds
of thousands of illegals, in a population of around 45 million. Most
of the migrants come from Latin America, Morocco and eastern Europe.
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