Cape Breton Post

Rights official: Italy unustly holding migrants on boat

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A delegation from Italy’s rights office on Thursday visited the 150 migrants who have been kept onboard a coast guard vessel for days and concluded they were being held unjustly.

The comments challenge Italy’s anti-migrant interior minister, who has declared that no migrants whom he considers “illegal” will set foot in a Sicilian port.

Daniela de Robert, the rights delegation chief, spoke after a three-hour visit aboard the Italian coast guard vessel Diciotti, which is docked in Catania on the Mediterran­ean island of Sicily.

She told Sky TG24 TV that the migrants on the boat come from countries that could make them eligible for internatio­nal protection. She said nearly 90 per cent are from Eritrea, while the others are from Syria, Sudan and Somalia.

“We found what we thought we’d find: persons deprived of freedom without any measure from judicial authoritie­s,” the Italian news agency ANSA

quoted her as saying.

She described the situation as a rights violation that would be brought to the attention of prosecutor­s in Sicily. The office’s formal title is “national guarantor of the rights of persons detained or deprived of personal liberty.”

The Diciotti rescued the migrants on Aug. 16 after they set sail from Libya in an unseaworth­y boat launched by

human trafficker­s. Shortly after the rescue at sea, 13 people with health problems, including children, were evacuated to a hospital. On Wednesday night, 27 unaccompan­ied minors, all teenagers, were allowed to disembark in Catania following an appeal by a juvenile court judge.

A psychologi­st who met with the minors said many were males from Eritrea who had been detained for long periods in Libya.

“One boy couldn’t see well, he constantly was trying to focus when his eyes were hit by light,” said Nathalie Leiba, a psychologi­st with Doctors without Borders. The boy explained that he had been kept for a year in darkness.

Interior Minister Matteo Salvini on Thursday described those aboard as “illegal immigrants,” and said they won’t be allowed to step foot on Italian soil. Instead, he insisted fellow European Union nations take in some of the asylum-seekers.

“Italy’s no longer Europe’s refugee camp,” he tweeted. “Upon my authorizat­ion, no one is disembarki­ng from the Diciotti.”

Salvini didn’t immediatel­y respond to the rights delegation’s findings.

Giovanna Di Benedetto, a spokeswoma­n for Save the Children, told Sky TG24 TV at Catania’s dock that the minors, including two females, in Libya, had endured “daily horrors.”

The rights workers donned masks and gloves to guard against disease for their visit.

 ?? AP PHOTO ?? Migrants sit on the deck of the Italian Coast Guard ship Diciotti at the Catania harbor, Italy, Thursday.
AP PHOTO Migrants sit on the deck of the Italian Coast Guard ship Diciotti at the Catania harbor, Italy, Thursday.

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