The Mayor of Milan, Giuseppe Sala, spoke out Tuesday amid reviews that U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) brokers would have a safety position in the course of the upcoming Winter Olympic Video games, that are set to start in Milan on Feb. 6.
“This can be a militia that kills,” Sala mentioned in an interview with Italian media. “It is a militia that enters individuals’s houses by signing permits for themselves … It is clear that they are not welcome in Milan, there isn’t any doubt about that.”
“On the Olympics, ICE’s Homeland Safety Investigations (HSI) is supporting the U.S. Division of State’s Diplomatic Safety Service and host nation to vet and mitigate dangers from transnational legal organizations. All safety operations stay beneath Italian authority,” ICE mentioned in a press release to the French information company AFP.
Piero CRUCIATTI/AFP/Getty
Sources on the U.S. Embassy in Rome instructed the AP that ICE would help U.S. diplomatic safety particulars in the course of the Olympics, however that it will not run any immigration enforcement operations in Milan.
A spokesperson on the U.S. embassy would neither verify nor deny the reviews to CBS Information on Tuesday.
Regardless of his disapproval, Sala questioned aloud in the course of the interview with Italy’s RTL Radio 102: “Might we ever say no to Trump?”
“I consider they should not come to Italy, as a result of they do not assure they’re aligned with our democratic safety administration strategies,” Sala mentioned. “We are able to maintain their safety ourselves. We do not want ICE.”
Gregorio Borgia/AP
The reviews of ICE’s deliberate position in U.S. safety operations in the course of the upcoming Winter Olympic Video games got here after Italian state tv aired video on Sunday of ICE brokers threatening to interrupt the home windows of a car carrying a state TV crew as they reported on the occasions in Minneapolis, the AP reported.
The deadly taking pictures of Alex Pretti by Border Patrol brokers in Minneapolis over the weekend, lower than three weeks after Renee Good, one other Minneapolis resident and U.S. citizen, was shot and killed by an ICE officer, have put town on the heart of America’s dispute over immigration enforcement and the techniques of its federal companies.

