The Niagara Falls Review

Spain to take in migrant ship amid standoff

Spain offers to take in refugee ship after Italy and Malta refuse

- NICOLE WINFIELD AND ARITZ PARRA

ROME — Spain stepped up Monday and offered to take in a rescue ship carrying more than 600 migrants after Italy and Malta refused. The diplomatic standoff left the migrants stranded in the Mediterran­ean Sea and revealed the brass-knuckled negotiatin­g tactics of Italy’s new anti-immigrant government.

Italy and Malta quickly thanked Spain’s new Socialist prime minister for the offer to receive aid group SOS Méditerran­ée’s ship at the port of Valencia. But it wasn’t certain if the voyage was feasible given the distance and how long the rescue vessel had been at sea.

The Aquarius was more than 1,400 kilometres (over 750 nautical miles) from Valencia on Monday, and said it had received no instructio­ns yet to head to Spain.

“It means that we need at least two more days of sailing, which is not possible today with 629 people on board,” SOS Méditerran­ée Maritime Operations Manager Antoine Laurent said.

The UN Refugee Agency, the European Union, Germany and humanitari­an groups had all demanded that the Mediterran­ean countries put their domestic politics aside and urgently consider the plight of the 629 migrants, among them more than 100 children, pregnant women and people suffering from hypothermi­a.

“The duty of a democratic government is not to look away” in a humanitari­an crisis, said Barcelona Mayor Ada Colau, who also offered her port as a potential solution to the standoff.

Doctors Without Borders, which has staff aboard the Aquarius, said the rescued migrants were stable for now but that food and water on the ship would run out by Monday night. It said some of the passengers were suffering from water in their lungs as well as chemical burns caused when gasoline mixes with seawater. Seven are pregnant.

“The team is still a bit calm and we know the situation is stable but it cannot run” forever, SOS Méditerran­ée’s Laurent said.

Despite the diplomatic pressure, Italy and Malta held firm, with Italian Interior Minister Matteo Salvini clearly using the high seas drama as a pretext to force the hand of Italy’s European neighbours. Italy has long demanded that the EU change its migration policy keep its promises to accept more refugees, saying that Italy has been left to co-ordinate rescues and accept tens of thousands of migrants a year for asylum processing.

“Enough!” Salvini said Monday. “Saving lives is a duty, but transformi­ng Italy into an enormous refugee camp isn’t.”

He tweeted: #Chiudiamoi­porti. “We’re closing the ports.”

Satisfied with Spain’s offer, Salvini later told reporters the standoff with Malta was “an important first signal” that Italy would no longer tolerate being left alone to accept and process would-be refugees. He vowed to also cut the funding Italy provides migrants as they wait to be processed.

“Apparently raising your voice pays off,” he said.

The migrants had been rescued from flimsy smugglers’ boats in the Mediterran­ean during a series of operations Saturday by Italian naval ships, cargo vessels and the Aquarius itself. All passengers were off-loaded to the Aquarius to be taken to land.

Italy argued that Malta should accept the Aquarius because Malta was the safest, closest port to the ship. Malta said Italy coordinate­d the rescues and that the tiny island nation — which in the last few years has only accepted a few hundred migrants — has had nothing to do with it.

Maltese Premier Joseph Muscat accused Italy of violating internatio­nal norms governing sea rescues and said its stance risked “creating a dangerous situation for all those involved.”

Spain’s new Socialist prime minister, Pedro Sanchez, ordered authoritie­s in Valencia to open the port, saying “it’s our duty to avoid a humanitari­an catastroph­e and offer a secure port for these people.”

But it wasn’t clear if the offer would be taken up given that the trip would expose the migrants to several days more on the sea.

Laurent acknowledg­ed Spain’s offer of solidarity but said it wasn’t up to the Rome-based rescue co-ordination centre run by the Italian coast guard. And he said the logistics and time counted against setting a course for Spain.

“We would need a resupply at sea which is not so easy to organize so we urge Italy to find a solution very soon close to our position,” he told The Associated Press in Paris.

Still, both Muscat and new Italian Premier Giuseppe Conte readily thanked Spain for the offer, with Conte saying “it goes in the direction of solidarity.”

As the rhetoric intensifie­d, the Aquarius remained on standby in the Mediterran­ean Sea with its 629 passengers, including 123 unaccompan­ied minors. The ship said it had been ordered by Italy’s coast guard late Sunday to remain 35 miles off Italy and 27 miles from Malta, and there it remained Monday.

A doctor on the ship, Dr. David Beversluis, said there were no medical emergencie­s on board but one passenger had to be revived after he was rescued.

“When the boat broke, a man sank in front of the eyes of the rescuers, who managed to catch him and revive him once out of the water. He is now out of danger,” Beversluis said. “All the survivors are exhausted and dehydrated because they spent many hours adrift in these boats.”

Almost a quarter of the migrant survivors hail from Sudan, the group said.

The standoff is actually the third migrant dispute in recent weeks, after Italy’s outgoing government refused to let humanitari­an aid groups dock in Italian ports until the ships’ flag nations had formally requested permission. Those incidents delayed the migrants’ arrival, but they ultimately made it to Italy.

 ?? KENNY KARPOV THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? This photo released by SOS Méditerran­ée on Twitter shows migrants about to board the SOS Mediterran­ee's Aquarius ship. Italy and Malta dug in for a second day and refused to let the rescue ship dock in their ports.
KENNY KARPOV THE ASSOCIATED PRESS This photo released by SOS Méditerran­ée on Twitter shows migrants about to board the SOS Mediterran­ee's Aquarius ship. Italy and Malta dug in for a second day and refused to let the rescue ship dock in their ports.

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