Bangkok Post

Migrants on German NGO ship to disembark in Malta

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VALLETTA: Malta said it has authorised 40 migrants aboard a rescue ship run by German NGO Sea-Eye to disembark following an agreement reached among several EU countries to take them in.

The deal was announced after the migrants on the Alan Kurdi ship, rescued on Wednesday off Libya, had been barred from landing in Italy. Italy’s farright Interior Minister Matteo Salvini has taken a hard line against migrants entering the country.

The migrants were set arrive in the Maltese capital Valletta yesterday, the Maltese government said. The German government and the European Commission made arrangemen­ts for the migrants to be shared among several EU countries, it said.

None of the 40 migrants will remain in Malta and the Alan Kurdi — named after a Syrian toddler who drowned in the Mediterran­ean Sea — will stay in internatio­nal waters as they disembark.

Portugal said yesterday it was prepared to accept five of those on board, and France, Germany and Luxembourg had offered to take others. On Thursday, Mr Salvini said the German government had told the European Commission that unless the 40 migrants onboard the Alan Kurdi were allowed to disembark in Italy it would not take in a group of 30 migrants it had already promised to accept.

“This is real blackmail,” said Mr Salvini. “It confirms that other European countries consider Italy as their refugee camp, but things have changed and we no longer accept orders and invasions.”

During its last rotation off Libya in early July, the Alan Kurdi rescued 109 migrants and disembarke­d them in Malta. Meanwhile, another humanitari­an ship, Open Arms, was looking for a port to disembark 121 migrants. The Spanish NGO Proactiva Open Arms had rescued 55 migrants off Libya on Thursday, and then took on a second group of 69 the next day. Two pregnant women and the sister of one of them were allowed to disembark in Italy for medical reasons, while the others remain onboard the ship which is barred from entering Italian territoria­l waters.

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