Yahoo - AFP, Marcello Paternostro with Dario Thuburn in Rome, 13 May 2014
Rome (AFP)
- Italy lashed out at the European Union on Tuesday after 17 bodies were
recovered and 206 people were saved from a migrant shipwreck, as rescuers
described scenes of panic in the latest tragedy in the Mediterranean Sea.
Interior
Minister Angelino Alfano urged more assistance from Europe for border patrols,
threatening that otherwise Italy would defy EU asylum rules and allow migrants
to travel on to other countries in Europe.
"We'll
just let them go," he said, although the Dublin Convention states that
migrants must remain in the country in which they arrive and make their asylum
application until their status as refugees is approved.
Alfano has
spoken of an immigration "emergency" and has said refugee centres are
already badly overcrowded, pointing out that most migrants do not want to stay
in Italy and want to join family in other parts of Europe.
The
ministry reported 36,000 migrants landing so far in 2014 -- many from Eritrea,
Somalia and Syria -- compared to 42,925 for all of 2013, 13,267 in 2012 and
63,000 in 2011 at the height of the Arab Spring revolts.
Hundreds,
and sometimes thousands, drown every year.
Map
locating the area in which a boat carrying migrants sank (AFP Photo/
P.Pizarro/A.Bommenel,
abm/dmk/jfs)
|
Countries
in southern Europe complain they are shouldering the burden of migrant arrivals
but northern European states take in more confirmed refugees, while the EU's
border agency Frontex is stretched thin.
"Europe
is leaving us on our own," Prime Minister Matteo Renzi, who has promised
to make immigration a top priority during Italy's EU presidency this year, said
on ReteQuattro television after Monday's disaster.
"It
can't save governments and banks and then let mothers and children die,"
the prime minister said.
The Italian
navy on Tuesday said a rescue operation involving warships, coast guard and
border patrol vessels as well as merchant ships had been completed.
Italian
media cited coast guards as saying that around 400 asylum-seekers may have been
on board the boat, which would leave dozens still unaccounted for.
But Mauro
Casinghini, the director of rescue services in Italy for the Order of Malta,
which had a doctor and two nurses assisting survivors with the coast guard at
the scene, said there were some 250 people on the boat.
He said
most of the migrants on the rickety boat, which probably departed from Libyan
shores, were from Eritrea, Pakistan, Somalia and Syria.
'Nearly didn't
make it'
Casinghini
described to AFP scenes from the shipwreck as recounted to him by the doctor,
Antonella Godino.
A Somali
woman, Amina, was found gripping a piece of wood floating in the water and
holding on to her four-month old baby after the boat capsized and sank in
international waters between Libya and Italy.
"She
nearly didn't make it. The waves were lapping at her chin and she was barely
holding her baby above the water," he cited Godino as saying.
"When
we held the little baby, we were afraid his heartbeat would not come back. We
dried him, wrapped him up in a thermal blanket and put him in the warmest place
we could find -- next to the engine room."
Giuseppe
Cannarile, a coast guard, was quoted by the La Stampa daily as saying: "We
don't know how many were on board but the survivors told us it was in the
hundreds".
A picture
released by the Italian navy shows migrants boarding the "Sirio"
during a rescue operation off the coast of Sicily on October 30, 2013 (AFP
Photo)
|
The navy
said two merchant vessels -- the Vanuatu-flagged Kehoe Tide and the French ship
Bourbon Arcadie -- were scrambled to the area as soon as the boat was spotted
by a coast guard patrol plane.
One of the
Italian warships, the Grecale frigate, was headed for the port of Catania in
Sicily with the survivors and the bodies of the victims on board.
Italian
media said it was expected at 1600 GMT.
The La
Repubblica daily said the migrant boat did not sink right away and rescuers
managed to board it to evacuate people before it capsized at around 1100 GMT.
"They
managed to rescue dozens of people who were terrified below deck or gripping
the handrail or in the water trying to stay afloat," the report said.
The Italian
navy launched a large-scale operation to rescue migrants and deter traffickers
following two separate shipwreck tragedies in October 2013 in which more than
400 people drowned off Italy's shores.
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