A new JRS Malta report uncovers shocking levels of exploitation and mistreatment among migrant workers in Malta, including withholding of wages, firing people without due cause, violations of health and safety regulations, and numerous instances of bullying,...
Civil Society press statement on the arrest and detention of Ethiopian nationals

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We are all shocked and saddened to hear of the arrest and detention of several Ethiopian nationals in recent days. These individuals are now being threatened with deportation after having lived and worked legally in Malta for many years, with the knowledge and authorisation of the authorities.
These recent immigration raids targeting people with rejected asylum applications have sent shockwaves throughout the broader refugee community. While some of those directly affected had arrived in Malta relatively recently, many had spent several years (some up to 20) here, some up to 20 years. For most of this time they worked legally, paying taxes and social security contributions.
The five arrested men have had their lives uprooted without any warning. They were forced to leave their jobs, homes, friendships, and belongings behind. Within minutes, their lives were rewound as they were taken away to the same place where they had first encountered Malta so many years ago: a detention centre. There, procedures are under way to send them back to a country they barely know, where their support system may be non-existent, and where they may be at risk of harm.
These unnecessary and cruel actions have a devastating impact not only on the people arrested, but on whole communities. In an instant, they dispel the sense of safety built over time, replacing it with an overwhelming feeling of fragility, mistrust and fear.
And it is not only refugee communities that are impacted. They are our neighbours, colleagues, partners, schoolmates, friends who have contributed to our lives in many different ways, not just through their work and taxes. They are one of us and Malta is also their home.
We appeal to the Government to create a pathway to regularisation for these and other rejected asylum-seekers who have lived and worked in Malta for years with the authorisation of the competent authorities.
This is indeed possible, as the examples in so many EU Member States clearly demonstrate. At the time, Malta’s own Specific Residence Authorisation policy was hailed as a European good practice. There are plenty of lessons to be learnt from these experiences and the Malta Refugee Council stands ready to engage with the Home Affairs Ministry on this urgent matter.
We also urge the Government to immediately release the detained Ethiopian nationals.
We call on members of the public and all people of good will to stand against the inhumane practice of rounding up people who have built their lives here and have become, in more ways than one, part of who we are. In the words of Bryan Stevenson, “we are all implicated when we allow other people to be mistreated…the absence of compassion can corrupt the decency of a community”.
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JRS Malta report sheds light on The Human Cost of Legal Precarity and Labour Exploitation in Malta
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On Friday, 12th September, we invite you to gather with us at St Aloysius College, B’Kara, for our annual fundraising celebration, Under the Stars. Doors open at 7pm. This year’s event is all about...