The Phnom Penh Post

Italy urges EU nations to open ports amid ‘unfolding tragedy’

- Ella Ide

ITALY’S interior minister called yesterday on other European countries to open their ports to rescue ships ahead of talks with France and Germany on tackling the migrant emergency.

Marco Minniti, who was to meet his counterpar­ts in Paris later yesterday to prepare for EU talks in Tallinn this week, said in an interview with Il Messaggero daily that “we are under enormous pressure”.

With arrivals in Italy up nearly 19 percent compared with the same period last year, Rome has threatened to close its ports to privately funded aid boats or insist funding is cut off to EU countries that fail to help with the crisis.

“There are NGO ships, Sophia and Frontex boats, Italian coast guard vessels” saving migrants in the Mediterran­ean, he said in a reference to the aid boats as well as the vessels deployed under EU border security and anti-trafficker missions.

“They are sailing under the flags of various European countries. If the only ports refugees are taken to are Italian, something is not working. This is the heart of the question,” he said.

“I am a Europhile and I would be proud if even one vessel, instead of arriving in Italy, went to another European port. It would not resolve Italy’s problem, but it would be an extraordin­ary signal” that Europe wanted to help Rome, he said.

Italy needs more internatio­nal support to cope with a growing number of migrants who have braved a perilous Mediterran­ean crossing to reach Europe this year, UN High Commission­er for Refugees Filippo Grandi said on Saturday.

“What is happening in front of our eyes in Italy is an unfolding tragedy,” Grandi said in a statement.

“In the course of last weekend, 12,600 migrants and refugees arrived on its shores, and an estimated 2,030 have lost their lives in the Mediterran­ean since the beginning of the year.”

Over 83,000 people rescued while attempting the perilous crossing from Libya have been brought to Italy so far this year, according to the UN, while more than 2,160 have died trying, the Internatio­nal Organisa- tion for Migration says.

Italy’s Red Cross has warned the situation in the country’s overcrowde­d reception centres is becoming critical.

Interior Minister Minniti was to meet counterpar­ts Gerard Collomb of France, Thomas de Maiziere of Germany and European Union Commission­er for Refugees Dimitris Avramopoul­os at 1800 GMT in Paris.

The Italian minister said Rome would be pushing for a way to shift the asylum applicatio­n process from Italy to Libya, and safely bring to Europe those who win the right to protection.

“We have to distinguis­h before they set off [across the Mediterran­ean] between those who have a right to humani- tarian protection and those who don’t. “And, on the basis of the decisions made by the UNHCR, we must ensure the former depart for Europe while economic migrants are voluntaril­y repatriate­d” to their countries of origin.

Unsourced Italian media reports said Rome was likely to call for a European code of conduct to be drawn up for the privately run aid boats, with the Corriere della Sera saying vessels that did not comply could be “seized”.

Critics have said the NGOs attract trafficker­s by sailing close to the Libyan coast. The NGOs insist they have no choice, because smugglers put the migrants out to sea in flimsy vessels that sink as they reach internatio­nal waters.

Rome would like a regional maritime command centre to oversee all rescue operations from Greece to Libya to Spain, which would spread the migrant arrivals between European countries, the Corriere della Sera said. And Italy insists that the EU refugee relocation programme – which is largely limited to people from Eritrea and Syria – should be expanded to include other nationalit­ies, such as Nigerians, La Repubblica said.

Between September 2015 and April 2017, some 5,001 asylumseek­ers – 14 percent of the 34,953 target – were relocated from Italy to 18 European countries, the UN’s refugee agency said.

 ?? MAHMUD TURKIA/AFP ?? Illegal immigrants, who were rescued by the Libyan coastguard in the Mediterran­ean off the Libyan coast, arrive at a naval base in the capital Tripoli on May 10.
MAHMUD TURKIA/AFP Illegal immigrants, who were rescued by the Libyan coastguard in the Mediterran­ean off the Libyan coast, arrive at a naval base in the capital Tripoli on May 10.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Cambodia