Gulf News

Rich and polished ride the crest of refugee wave

DOCTORS, LAWYERS, PROFESSORS AND WEALTHIER REFUGEES PAY HUGE SUMS TO SAIL BY LUXURY YACHTS AND FAST-SPEED SAILBOATS TO CROSS THE MEDITERRAN­EAN SEA AND LAND IN EUROPE

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nly the wealthiest refugees could afford to pay for a voyage on the beautiful 10-metre yacht that sailed under a Ukrainian flag.

Today that sailboat is under police guard along with a dozen other luxury vessels impounded at the Sicilian port of Augusta. Its former skipper, Andrej, has recently been released from prison after serving a one-year sentence for aiding illegal immigratio­n.

Andrej, 35, a Ukrainian, was convicted for transporti­ng 30 refugees from Turkey to Sicily, landing on a small beach in the province of Syracuse. Each passenger paid more than €8,000 (Dh34,970) for the crossing.

Compared with the inflatable vessels and rickety fishing boats used to take refugees from North Africa across the Mediterran­ean, the mode of transport that Andrej offered — and others continue to offer — was exclusive and first class.

“I saw Syrian doctors, Afghan lawyers and magistrate­s, Iraqi professors and entreprene­urs [disembarki­ng] from these boats,” said Carlo Parini, the police chief inspector for illegal immigratio­n in the southeaste­rn port of Syracuse, who led the operations in which the boats were recovered from Turkey and impounded.

Some families are known to have paid nearly €100,000 to reach Europe from the Middle East. According to witnesses, some of those who arrived by yacht were dressed elegantly, carrying suitcases and expensive bags. After completing registrati­on procedures on arrival, some went out for dinner at upmarket restaurant­s nearby.

Many of those who have arrived in Sicily by yacht from Turkey are fleeing brutal regimes and conflict, but they are able to pay for a level of safety — even comfort — that thousands of others cannot.

More than 120,000 people have arrived in Europe by sea so far this year, most having departed from Libya bound for Italy, from Turkey bound for Greece or, more recently, from Morocco bound for Spain, usually in shoddy, overcrowde­d vessels. The Italian route has proven to be the world’s most lethal.

Police figures suggest 883 refugees landed in Sicily by yacht between January and August this year. There were 682 similar arrivals in 2016.

Parini said these figures were estimates. “In reality, there are many more,” he said. “Some of these yachts head to other parts of Italy, such as Leuca, a town in the extreme southern tip of Apulia, close to Sicily. Some manage to disembark the refugees and go back. We cannot monitor every single sailing boat in the Mediterran­ean. It would be impossible.”

Italian authoritie­s believe a Turkish crime ring with links to gangs in Ukraine is behind the luxury landings. The skippers ferrying the passengers on the impounded boats were exclusivel­y Ukrainian and the vessels were registered in Turkey, the US or were rented. Andrej said he left his country to look for work in Europe in order to escape national military service. “I needed to work and I had done a sailing boat course. When they asked me to bring these people to Italy, I accepted,” he told the Guardian, describing his bosses as Turkish. “Like [the passengers], I too had to flee from my country. But unlike them, I did not have the money to pay for yacht crossing. But I knew how to pilot it.”

Though controvers­ial measures taken by the Italian government have led to a drop in the numbers of new arrivals in the past two months, hundreds of people continue to land in Sicily and southern Italy each week, according to authoritie­s. Many are finding new routes and landing points to evade the tighter security measures.

On the west coast of Sicily, large motorboats and motorpower­ed inflatable­s fly at high speed across the waters of the Mediterran­ean, carrying families of refugees from the ports of Tunisia to the provinces of Trapani and Agrigento. For their landings, they choose the most deserted beaches to avoid police controls.

Last June, the Guardia di Finanza (Italy’s finance police) in Palermo discovered a wave of clandestin­e journeys from Tunisia to Sicily using rapid boats capable of reaching the island in less than four hours, with passage costing €2,0003,000 per person. The trafficker­s were earning about €50,000 per journey. The police operation brought about the arrest of 15 Tunisian and Italian nationals.

At the beginning of the year, coastguard officers in Agrigento and Trapani stopped two rafted motorboats near the coast. On board were Tunisian families including a 12-yearold child. One of the speedboats was equipped with three 400-horsepower marine outboard motors, which are normally used for racing boats and are capable of pushing boats to speeds of up 90mph — faster than any vessel available to the coastguard­s.

“That sort of boat could reach Sicily from Tunisia in a few hours,” said Salvatore Vella, a prosecutor in Agrigento who has led some of the most significan­t investigat­ions into people-smuggling in Sicily.

Vella said some people smugglers operated like “illegal travel agencies”. He said: “Like the legal ones, they offer first-, secondand third-class journeys. It depends how much money you can pay.”

 ?? AP ?? Sub-Saharan refugees wait to be rescued by aid workers of Spanish NGO Proactiva Open Arms in the Mediterran­ean Sea, north of Sabratha, Libya, on July 25, 2017.
AP Sub-Saharan refugees wait to be rescued by aid workers of Spanish NGO Proactiva Open Arms in the Mediterran­ean Sea, north of Sabratha, Libya, on July 25, 2017.
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 ?? AP/Rex Features ?? Top: Divers search a yacht used to transport refugees illegally that overturned in a fatal accident at the port of Vathy on the Greek island of Samos in May 2014.
AP/Rex Features Top: Divers search a yacht used to transport refugees illegally that overturned in a fatal accident at the port of Vathy on the Greek island of Samos in May 2014.

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