Spain to the rescue
Land ahead for hundreds of migrants stranded on an aid ship in the Mediterranean. >29
ROME: Italy’s new “Italians first” government claimed victory when the Spanish prime minister offered safe harbour to a private rescue ship after Italy and Malta refused to allow it permission to disembark its 629 migrant passengers in their ports.
The Aquarius, a rescue vessel operated by aid group SOS Mediterranee, has been stuck in the Mediterranean Sea since Saturday, when Italy refused its crew permission to dock and demanded that Malta do so. Malta refused on Sunday.
Spain’s new Socialist prime minister, Pedro Sanchez stepped in on Monday, ordering authorities in Valencia to prepare for the ship’s arrival.
“It’s our duty to avoid a humanitarian catastrophe and offer a secure port for these people,” Sanchez said.
Both the ship and its passengers were caught up in a political dispute that might not have happened weeks ago.
One of the coalition partners in the populist government that took over in Italy on June 1, the rightwing League, promised voters other European Union countries would be made to share the burden of caring for asylum-seekers who set out for Europe on unseaworthy smugglers’ boats.
“Evidently it pays to raise one’s voice, something Italy hasn’t done as long as one can remember,” Italian Interior Minister Matteo Salvini, the League’s leader, said Monday at party headquarters.
For those aboard the Aquarius, Spain’s offer of docking rights at the port of Valencia was welcome news, although it did not provide a quick or easy solution.
By Monday evening, the ship was more than 1,400km from Valencia
and still awaiting formal instructions to head to Spain as weather forecasts predicted worsening conditions.
It was unclear if the days of sailing west it would take to get to Spain were feasible, SOS Mediterranee Maritime Operations Manager Antoine Laurent said.