The CARA di Mineo refugee camp sits on the road between Catania and the town of Gela in Italy. Rows of square, prefabricated houses painted in shades of yellow and orange line up like soldiers, standing guard over the rural Sicilian landscape surrounding them. These homes stoically wait for the mostly African and Asian refugees who go there every year, fleeing their home countries with little more than the clothes on their backs.
It’s the future these refugees are focused on, but aid workers say the feelings of loneliness that come with lack of access to the outside world leave them vulnerable to possible exploitation by terrorist groups that use Facebook as a potential way to radicalize and recruit refugees into their ranks.
To explore ways to counteract these possible radicalization efforts, the Penn State College of Communications Information Communication Technology for Development (ICT4D) Consortium, which studies the effects this isolation has on refugees in CARA di Mineo and other camps, is proposing ways to help keep refugees from being unknowingly converted back into a life full of anguish and suffering — a life many of them just escaped.
Established in 2011, the ICT4D Consortium focuses on the use of technology or technology-related tools to bring about socio-economic development, international development and human rights. In 2013, while exploring how Sri-Lankan Tamil refugees used communication technologies like smartphones to feel more connected to their homeland, researchers in the consortium observed the refugees habitually using social media platforms — most prominently Facebook.
According to Akshaya Sreenivasan, a graduate student in the ICT4D Consortium who has spent time in refugee camps, including CARA di Mineo, that observation was a surprising one.
“We were looking at how the Internet and mobile phones were acting as a conduit between their feelings about their homeland and what was happening to them in their host country,” said Sreenivasan. “We saw them obsessively using Facebook as a window to what was going on back home. They were using Facebook to stay connected to the place they fought so hard to leave at a level we didn’t even consider.”
For a refugee, getting to CARA di Mineo is only the beginning. Originally built as a housing complex for U.S. Marines who were later relocated to the Naval Air Station Sigonella in Sicily, the camp is the largest refugee reception center in Europe. Roughly 4,000 refugees are housed together at the camp at any given time while they wait for their paperwork to be processed and asylum granted by the Italian government — which can take up to 18 months.
Upon arrival, they are given a single bed and some clothing, including discarded sweatshirts adorned with the logos of American schools like Harvard and Yale, and are assigned residence in one of the two-story homes, sharing space with up to 17 others. Camp residents are provided with a stipend of 2.5 euros per day from the Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees — which safeguards the rights and well-being of refugees worldwide — and three meals a day plus coffee.
They spend their days at CARA di Mineo idle, bored and without much entertainment, save for a sports field and swing sets for the children. While the camp’s barbed wire fences and armed guards suggest confinement, refugees are free to venture out to neighboring towns to shop for goods and services, providing they sign out and check back in.