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G-7 Meeting Interior Ministers Meeting in Italy Discusses Human Trafficking, Cyber-Security and AI 

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G-7 Meeting Interior Ministers Meeting in Italy Discusses Human Trafficking, Cyber-Security and AI 

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Some representatives of third countries, including Libya, Tunisia, and Algeria were also invited. Unauthorized migration to European Union nations declined sharply in the initial eight months of the year, regardless of political rhetoric.

Interior ministers from the G7, a group including some of the world’s most industrialized economies, gathered in Mirabella Eclano southern Italy on Thursday (Oct. 03).

The two-day summit will focus on migration and human trafficking, threats caused by international crises, drug trafficking, AI, and cyber-security. Delegations from France, Germany, Japan, Canada, the United Kingdom, and the United States, apart from the host country are attending the meeting.

Some representatives of third countries, including Libya, Tunisia, and Algeria were also invited. Unauthorized migration to European Union nations declined sharply in the initial eight months of the year, regardless of political rhetoric.

Italian Minister of the Interior, Matteo Piantedosi, opening the proceedings of the G7 Internal Affairs meeting in Mirabella Eclano, in the province of Avellino, said he was certain that the meeting in Irpinia would be a ministerial meeting full of food for thought. He hoped this would strengthen the common vision of the G7 countries at such a delicate moment from a historical and geopolitical point of view.

The G7 Interior Ministerial Conference could be an opportunity to try to bring European countries together towards a common policy of containing flows and above all of opening up regular channels of entry and fighting without hesitation the actions of traffickers, the Minister of the Interior hoped. “Conflicts increase the risk of attacks. In Italy, there is no alarm but great attention.

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The two conflicts in the Middle East and Ukraine are contributing to polarization in our societies, increasing the risk of terrorist acts, he added.