Los Angeles Times

Boats packed with 1,200 migrants reach Italian isle

-

ROME — More than 1,200 migrants in several decrepit, overcrowde­d fishing boats on Sunday reached a tiny Italian island in the span of 12 hours, as human trafficker­s exploited calm seas and warm weather to launch multiple vessels, the mayor said.

The first of the migrants arrived at 5 a.m., Lampedusa Mayor Salvatore Martello told Sky TG24 TV. It was the biggest number of migrants to come ashore in a single day this year at an Italian port.

“I’ve said all you need is a day of good weather to see [all] these boats,” Martello said. He appealed to Premier Mario Draghi to put migration on the agenda even as the government is heavily focused on guiding Italy’s economic and social recovery from the COVID-19 pandemic.

By late afternoon, at least nine boats disembarke­d on the island, which has an initial processing center for migrants coming ashore and requesting asylum.

Italian news reports said Italian coast guard and customs police boats escorted the vessels to Lampedusa after they were spotted in the Mediterran­ean a few miles offshore. The island, which lives off tourism and fishing, is closer to northern Africa than to the Italian mainland.

A newspaper in Sicily, Il Giornale di Sicilia, said they arrived on wooden or metal boats. Many migrants were reported to be from Bangladesh and Tunisia. Most of those reaching Lampedusa were men, but there were some women and children, including a newborn, the newspaper said.

In recent years, there have been surges in the number of migrant arrivals, either being rescued at sea, escorted by military vessels or sailing unassisted directly to Italian shores when seas are calm. In recent years, a few thousand migrants rescued at sea arrived in one day.

Right-wing leader Matteo Salvini pressed Draghi to take action.

“A meeting with Draghi is needed, with millions of Italians in difficulty we can’t think about thousands of clandestin­e” migrants, Salvini tweeted. He added that some 12,000 migrants have arrived this year, many in recent weekss.

Many migrants, including those rescued at sea by charity boats, cargo ships or military vessels in the waters north of Libya, are economic migrants who are unlikely to be granted asylum.

 ?? Salvatore Cavalli Associated Press ?? AN ITALIAN police vessel off Lampedusa, Italy, in 2019. At least nine boats full of migrants came ashore Sunday, prompting the mayor to appeal for assistance.
Salvatore Cavalli Associated Press AN ITALIAN police vessel off Lampedusa, Italy, in 2019. At least nine boats full of migrants came ashore Sunday, prompting the mayor to appeal for assistance.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States