The Star Malaysia

Reaching Spanish shores

Migrants on board the ‘Aquarius’ finally reach Spain after a week-long odyssey.

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VALENCIA (Spain): The 630 migrants whose rescue sparked a major migration row in Europe began disembarki­ng in Spain, after a turbulent week that saw Italy turn away the Aquarius ship.

The first of three ships transporti­ng the group, an Italian coast guard vessel called the Dattilo, pulled into Valencia harbour yesterday just before 6.30am local time with 274 migrants on board, according to the Red Cross.

Applause could be heard coming from the ship as it docked.

Medical staff wearing white overalls, gloves and masks then boarded the boat to carry out first medical checks as a police helicopter flew overhead.

The other migrants were due to arrive on an Italian navy ship, the Orione, and the Aquarius, regional authoritie­s said.

The migrants, mainly from Africa, were welcomed by a team of more than 2,000 people, including 1,000 Red Cross volunteers and 470 translator­s.

Dozens of reporters who were on hand to cover their arrival were kept at a distance.

High waves and winds forced the convoy to take a detour on their 1,500km voyage to Spain.

Their arrival marked the end of a weeklong odyssey in the Mediterran­ean Sea.

A huge banner was earlier put up at the port saying “Welcome home” in various languages, including Catalan, the local language, and Arabic.

“People are coming forward for everything – serving as translator­s, providing accommodat­ion,” said Johnson Tamayo, a 51yearold artist and Red Cross volunteer.

The passengers are made up of 450 adult men and 80 women – including at least seven pregnant women – as well as 11 under13s and 89 adolescent­s, according to figures released by authoritie­s in Valencia.

They come from 26 countries, mainly from Africa but also Afghanista­n, Bangladesh and Pakistan, according to Doctors Without Borders (MSF).

Chartered by a French aid group, Aquarius rescued the migrants off Libya’s coast last weekend.

MSF, who along with French charity SOS Mediterran­ee were treating the migrants on board the ship, said two passengers drowned last weekend when the ship first encountere­d difficulti­es off Libya.

Italy’s new populist government and Malta refused to let Aquarius dock in their ports, accusing each other of failing to meet their humanitari­an and EU commitment­s.

Spain eventually stepped in and agreed to receive the refugees as a “political gesture” to “oblige Europe to forge a common policy to a common problem”, Foreign Minister Josep Borrell said.

Madrid on Saturday said it had accepted an offer from France – who had angered Rome by branding it irresponsi­ble over the vessel rejection – to welcome Aquarius migrants who “meet the criteria for asylum”.

Two countries will “work togeth er” to handle the arrival, Spain’s deputy prime minister Carmen Calvo said.

Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez thanked French President Emmanuel Macron for his gesture, saying it was “exactly the kind of cooperatio­n Europe needs” at this hour.

After Rome’s decision to ban the Aquarius, Macron and Italian Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte met on Friday and agreed that the EU should set up asylum processing centres in Africa to prevent “voyages of death”. — AFP

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 ??  ?? To port: The Dattilo pulling into the harbour. — AP
To port: The Dattilo pulling into the harbour. — AP
 ??  ?? Easy does it: Migrants disembarki­ng from the Dattilo upon their arrival at the eastern port of Valencia in Spain. — AP
Easy does it: Migrants disembarki­ng from the Dattilo upon their arrival at the eastern port of Valencia in Spain. — AP

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