The Phnom Penh Post

Berlin to accept 40 migrants rescued off Malta after ships defied Italy ban

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MALTA’S prime minister said on Sunday his countr y would relocate to other EU nations 65 migrants from the Alan Kurdi rescue ship, after t wo ot her boats defied efforts to stop them landing in neighbouri­ng Ita ly.

All 65 were transferre­d to a Maltese navy ship on Sunday evening, the German charity Sea-Eye which operates the boat said in a statement, adding that its vessel had been refused entry to Valetta port.

Premier Joseph Muscat tweeted earlier that “following discussion­s with the EU Commission and the German government”, the 65 people would be transferre­d from the Alan Kurdi to a Maltese military “asset which will then enter a Maltese port”.

“All rescued persons on board will be immediatel­y relocated to other EU member states,” he added.

German Interior Minister Horst Seehofer said his country would take in up to 40 migrants – 15 to 20 from the Alan Kurdi and the rest from a group rescued by Maltese authoritie­s on Sunday, the German media group Funke reported.

Maltese authoritie­s said they had rescued another group of 50 migrants in Malta’s search and rescue zone on Sunday, after receiving a distress call saying their vessel was sinking.

They arrived in Malta on Sunday evening.

Earlier, Seehofer wrote a letter to Italy’s far-right Interior Minister Matteo Salvini asking him to rethink his policy on accepting rescue boats, sources close to the German government said.

“We cannot be responsibl­e for boats with people rescued from shipwrecks on board spending weeks on the Mediterran­ean because they can’t find a port,” Seehofer wrote.

The Ita lian and Maltese foreign ministers, Enzo Moavero and Carmelo Abela, issued a joint statement decr y ing the “case by case” approach to t he migrant crisis.

They called for a “permanent mechanism at the level of the EU that faces all the sensitive questions concerning migration” to be discussed at the EU’s next Foreign Affairs Council meeting later this month.

The Alan Kurdi, which had been banned from entering Maltese waters after waiting off the island of Lampedusa in recent days, is the third rescue vessel in a week to make headlines.

Salvini has attempted to block Italian ports to rescue ships, as tensions rise over the internatio­nal response to the migration crisis.

Early on Sunday, dozens of shipwrecke­d migrants disembarke­d in Italy after their rescue boat docked on Lampedusa.

Some 41 people were finally allowed to step off migrant rescue charity Mediterran­ea’s Italianfla­gged Alex, which arrived at the port on Saturday in an overnight operation that saw the ship temporaril­y seized by authoritie­s.

The boat’s captain, Tommaso Stella, is being investigat­ed for allegedly aiding illegal immigratio­n, according to the Italian news agency Agi.

Salvini last month issued a decree that would impose fines of up to € 50,000 ($57,000) for the captain, owner and operator of a vessel “entering Italian territoria­l waters without authorisat­ion”.

After the Alex reached port, the populist deputy prime minister said that he would raise the maximum fine to € 1 million.

The Alan Kurdi was carrying migrants who were rescued when they encountere­d difficulti­es off Libya.

“None of the said immigrants will remain in #Malta as this case was not under the responsibi­lity of the Maltese authoritie­s. 3 persons on board in need of urgent medical attention will be immediatel­y evacuated,” Malta’s prime minister added on Twitter.

Libya, which has been wracked by chaos since the 2011 uprising that killed dictator Moamer Kadhafi, has long been a major transit route for migrants, especially from Sub-Saharan Africa, desperate to reach Europe.

On Tuesday, 53 migrants were killed in an air strike on a detention centre in a Tripoli suburb held by forces loyal to the UN-recognised government.

Pope Francis on Sunday called for “humanitari­an corridors” to help rescue migrants in response to that air strike.

 ?? MATTHEW MIRABELLI/AFP ?? Migrants, part of a group of 65 rescued by the German-flagged NGO rescue ship Alan Kurdi, sit in a patrol boat as they are brought into Haywharf, in Valletta, by the Armed Forces of Malta after being transferre­d onto the Maltese patrol boat on Sunday.
MATTHEW MIRABELLI/AFP Migrants, part of a group of 65 rescued by the German-flagged NGO rescue ship Alan Kurdi, sit in a patrol boat as they are brought into Haywharf, in Valletta, by the Armed Forces of Malta after being transferre­d onto the Maltese patrol boat on Sunday.

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