Kuwait Times

Italy focuses on Libya mission to manage its migrant crisis

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Italy is putting its hopes for managing the migrant crisis on a new, Libya-requested mission to support the North African nation’s coast guard after suffering a rebuke by humanitari­an groups. Italian ministers were briefing parliament­ary committees yesterday on a mission approved by the Cabinet to deploy the navy to aid the Libyan coast guard in its territoria­l waters. A vote could come as early as today.

Premier Paolo Gentiloni says the mission could become a “turning point” in Italy’s bid to manage the unrelentin­g flow of migrants across the Mediterran­ean Sea. The UN migration agency says 94,802 migrants have arrived in Italy this year through Sunday, up 11 percent over last year and 85 percent of the European total. They estimate that 2,221 people have drowned this year alone on the central Mediterran­ean route.

Italy’s bid to get 10 humanitari­an groups to agree to new rules of conduct for rescuing people from the Mediterran­ean failed when at least four, including Doctors Without Borders, refused to sign on Monday. Objections to the Italian demands included rejecting a provision permitting armed police on board the rescue ships and not being allowed to transfer migrants to another vessel in order to continue other rescues, instead being forced back to port.

Doctors Without Borders general director Gabriele Eminente said her charity would continue to work in the Mediterran­ean “but at the moment, I don’t understand what the failure to sign means.”The Italian government has said humanitari­an groups who do not agree to the new rules could be refused access to Italian ports.

In Brussels, European Commission spokeswoma­n Natasha Bertaud also said that if the groups “adhere to some principles and operationa­l standards, in line with internatio­nal law, then they will have the assurance that they can access Italian ports.” But it seems unlikely that Italy could deprive them of access to its ports. Under internatio­nal law, vessels that have rescued people must not be subject to undue delay, financial burden or other difficulti­es, according to the UN’s refugee agency.

At least three groups accepted the Italian government’s rules: Save the Children, Malta’s MOAS and the Spanish group Proactiva. The Commission is encouragin­g more to sign up. Italy drafted the code of conduct after prosecutor­s in Sicily alleged that some non-government­al organizati­ons had been colluding with the smugglers who send boatloads of migrants out daily from Libya, for example by signaling their presence in one area of the sea. —AP

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