Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Disasters spur calls for secure migration

- COLLEEN BARRY AND STEPHEN CALLEJA

VALLETTA, Malta — Three deadly Mediterran­ean shipwrecks that claimed the lives of hundreds of asylum seekers fleeing war and repression sharpened calls Saturday for humanitari­an corridors to allow safe passage to Europe.

At least 34 people drowned in Maltese waters south of the Italian island of Lampedusa when a boat packed with hundreds of Syrians and Palestinia­ns capsized Friday, the same day 12 other migrants died in a shipwreck off of Egypt.

Those deaths came just eight days after at least 339 Eritreans died when their boat sank within sight of Lampedusa in one of the worst verified migrant sea tragedies on the Mediterran­ean.

Facing unrest and persecutio­n in Africa and the Middle East, many migrants risk the often dangerous journey to Lampedusa, a gateway to Europe just 70 miles from Africa, in rickety boats procured by people whom smugglers charge more than $2,200.

Most are asylum seekers, fleeing civil war in Syria or repression and mandatory conscripti­on in Eritrea, unlike the waves of economic migrants a decade ago.

The United Nations high commission­er for refugees, Antonio Guterres, expressed concern that Syrians fleeing conflict have sought to reach Europe by such a perilous route, calling it “inhumane.”

“They escaped bullets and bombs only to perish before they could ever claim asylum,” he said, adding that there had been reports that the vessel had been fired on shortly after departing Zwara, Libya.

U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon called for action to prevent future disasters “that places the vulnerabil­ity and human rights of migrants at the center,” and Pope Francis lamented that “too often we are blinded by our comfortabl­e lives and refuse to see those dying at our doorstep.”

The boat in Maltese waters capsized Friday about 65 miles southeast of Lampedusa, in waters where Malta has search and rescue responsibi­lities.

A joint Italian-Malta operation rescued nearly 200 people after the Italian Coast Guard received a distress call via satellite phone from the boat and a Maltese aircraft sighted the capsized boat with numerous people in the water. At least 34 people died, and 146 survivors were brought to Malta.

The victims included a 3-year-old boy whose body was found floating in the sea more than a day after the boat capsized, said Silvio Scerri, the chief of staff at Malta’s Home Affairs Ministry.

The U.N. refugee agency said survivors claim that up to 400 people were on board. Search operations were still underway.

Other survivors, 56 in all, who were not in immediate need of medical attention were heading to Sicily on board an Italian frigate.

Italian naval spokesman Cmdr. Marco Maccaroni said some 180 people were also rescued from other boats in the same area overnight — another indication of the relentless flows of migrants braving the Mediterran­ean.

“The flows have never stopped, especially over the summer months,” Maccaroni said. “The two accidents in such a short period have raised the attention of the public, but the tensions have been going on all summer.”

Some 30,100 migrants arrived in Italy and Malta in the first nine months of 2013, compared with 15,000 in all of 2012, according to the U.N. refugee agency.

At least 70,000 Syrians are registered in Egypt as refugees. Many, including thousands of Palestinia­ns who also fled the war in Syria, are not registered and use the country as a stopover before attempting the sea trip to Europe.

Just 155 people survived the Oct. 3 shipwreck off Lampedusa. Coffins carrying the bodies of 80 of the 339 people who died, mostly Eritreans, were boarded on a ferry in Lampedusa to be transporte­d to Sicily, where the victims of the shipwreck are to be buried.

“Urgent measures must be adopted to open humanitari­an corridors. There is no time to lose,” said Francesco Rocca, the president of the Italian Red Cross, emphasizin­g that people escaping war and repression must be given a safe route of escape. “In this way it would hit also the trafficker­s and we could stop this ceaseless massacre.”

Italy’s integratio­n minister, Cecile Kyenge, called for increased patrols to stop smugglers.

“Behind these tragedies, as the dramatic instabilit­y of African countries increases, there are human trafficker­s who are enriching themselves on the backs of people who are fleeing war and hunger,” said the Congolese-borne Kyenge.

Fortress Europe, an Italian organizati­on that tracks migrant deaths reported by the media, says about 6,450 people died in the Strait of Sicily, where Lampedusa is located, between 1994 and 2012. Often ships disappear at sea, leaving no way to verify the deaths.

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