Los Angeles Times

Italy saves thousands

In three days, rescue vessels pick up 5,629 refugees and migrants attempting a perilous crossing from Libya.

- By Tom Kington Kington is a special correspond­ent.

ROME — Italian rescue services saved 5,629 migrants and refugees sailing from Libya to Italy during the last few days, officials said Monday, as aid agencies predicted a large wave of migration across the Mediterran­ean this summer.

The migrants, including Africans fleeing extremism, poverty and oppression, and Syrians escaping their country’s civil war, were packed into 20 rickety fishing boats and overloaded inflatable dinghies, officials said.

After leaving Libya, the migrants used satellite phones to send out distress calls and were picked up by Italian coast guard vessels, merchant ships and patrol ships sailing as part of a European Union mission.

Nine of the migrants drowned when their vessel capsized, and 144 other passengers from the vessel were pulled out of the water after they were spotted by a coast guard surveillan­ce plane.

Officials said the 5,629 people were saved in a threeday period that started Friday.

The migrants set sail as calm weather arrived in the Mediterran­ean, and officials predicted the numbers sailing this year could surpass the 170,000 who sailed to Italy in 2014.

Thousands are waiting to leave from Libya, where militias are fighting for power.

“Talking to people arriving, you hear stories about children armed with guns in Libya and amazing violence,” said Giovanna Di Benedetto, a spokeswoma­n with Save the Children. “I predict big numbers this year, and we need to strengthen the rescue operation at sea.”

The Italian coast guard has made most of the sea rescues this year. An Italian navy operation known as Mare Nostrum was canceled last year and replaced by the more limited EU operation Triton, which stays closer to the Italian coast.

European government­s suggested at the time that Mare Nostrum was encouragin­g migrants to sail. But with 18,000 sailing so far this year, the numbers are about the same as last year. What has increased is the number of drownings — about 500 so far this year, compared with about 17 in the same period last year, the United Nations said.

“The end of Mare Nostrum has not deterred anyone, and more are dying because the navy is not patrolling the high seas,” said Carlotta Sami, a U.N. spokeswoma­n.

On Monday, aid officials were rushing to Palermo, where up to 1,200 migrants were expected to land during the night, including 13 pregnant women and some unaccompan­ied minors.

“The minors coming in are from Gambia, Ethiopia, Eritrea, Somalia and Ivory Coast,” said a spokesman for Save the Children. “This is a problem because centers for unaccompan­ied minors in Palermo are already full.”

On Friday, the internatio­nal aid agency Doctors Without Borders said it would team up with an American, Christophe­r Catrambone, and his Italian wife, Regina, to mount a $3.4-million private rescue effort for migrants between May and October.

The Catrambone­s, who run a medical insurance business on the island of Malta, spent about $850,000 last year to buy a ship and helicopter drones, and their operation picked up 3,000 migrants at sea over a sixweek period during the summer.

This year they will extend the operation to six months, running between May and October, joined by Doctors Without Borders, which will split the costs with the couple.

The aid agency will provide a medical team of two doctors and a nurse to treat dehydratio­n, fuel burns, severe sunburn and hypothermi­a suffered at sea by migrants.

 ?? Photograph­s by Calogero Montanalam­po Associated Press ?? MIGRANTS ARRIVE in Sicily. One ship out of Libya capsized; 144 passengers were saved, but nine drowned. Aid agencies are predicting a massive wave of migration across the Mediterran­ean this summer.
Photograph­s by Calogero Montanalam­po Associated Press MIGRANTS ARRIVE in Sicily. One ship out of Libya capsized; 144 passengers were saved, but nine drowned. Aid agencies are predicting a massive wave of migration across the Mediterran­ean this summer.
 ??  ?? A RED CROSS volunteer holds a baby in Porto Empedocle, Sicily, after the arrival of rescued migrants.
A RED CROSS volunteer holds a baby in Porto Empedocle, Sicily, after the arrival of rescued migrants.

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