Algerians Are Concerned With 180,000 Job Opportunities In Italy.

The Italian Senate has officially approved the “Decreto Flussi” immigration flow decree for seasonal and non-seasonal foreign workers, making it an adopted law, which opens up more than 181,000 job opportunities for migrants within a regulated framework, including Algerians, in addition to 18 other nationalities.
The vote on the decree came at the request of the Italian government, after left-center parties announced their opposition to this measure. It received the support of 99 senators, while 65 others opposed it, and one member abstained from voting. This followed days after the project was endorsed by members of the Chamber of Deputies, “la Camera.”
The decree stipulates that 70,020 jobs are authorized within the framework of non-seasonal employment, in addition to 110,000 opportunities in seasonal employment, indicating that citizens of 19 countries, which Rome considers “safe countries,” can participate in the process to secure jobs in the relevant sectors.
The list of the 19 countries includes Albania, Algeria, Bangladesh, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Cape Verde, Ivory Coast, Egypt, Gambia, Georgia, Ghana, Kosovo, North Macedonia, Morocco, Montenegro, Peru, Senegal, Serbia, Sri Lanka, and Tunisia.
Regarding the sectors in which nationals from the countries listed can be accepted to work on Italian territory under the framework of non-seasonal foreign labor, they are land transport for others, construction, tourism, hospitality, mechanics, wired and wireless communications, food, shipbuilding, passenger transport by bus, fishing, hairdressers, electricians, and plumbers.
As for the land transport sector for others and passenger transport by bus, the decree stated that non-seasonal work applications can be submitted for the citizens of the concerned countries, including Algeria. It emphasized that it is necessary for the job applicant to hold a driving license equivalent to the required category and transferable in Italy based on the applicable reciprocity agreements.
Applications can be submitted on the Italian Ministry of the Interior’s portal on February 5, 7, and 12, 2025, known as “click days,” depending on the type of labor required, seasonal or non-seasonal.