San Francisco Chronicle

1 Refugee crisis:

European leaders warn of a spike in migration when sea waters warm in the spring.

- By Lorne Cook Lorne Cook is an Associated Press writer.

VALLETTA, Malta — Tens of thousands of people seeking better lives are expected to trek across deserts and board unseaworth­y boats in war-torn Libya this year in a desperate effort to reach European shores by way of Italy.

More than 181,000 people, most considered “economic migrants” with little chance of being allowed to stay in Europe, attempted to cross the central Mediterran­ean last year from Libya, Africa’s nearest stretch of coast to Italy. About 4,500 died or disappeare­d.

Hundreds already have taken to the sea this month, braving the winter weather. In the latest reminder of the journey’s perils, more than 100 people were missing off Libya’s coast over the weekend after a migrant boat sank.

Some European leaders are warning of a fresh migration crisis when sea waters warm again and more people choose to put their lives in the hands of smugglers.

“Come next spring, the number of people crossing over the Mediterran­ean will reach record levels,” Malta Prime Minister Joseph Muscat, whose country holds the European Union’s presidency, predicted.

The 28-nation EU already has a controvers­ial deal to stem the flow of migrants from Turkey, which has agreed to try to stop the number of migrants leaving the country and to take back thousands more. In exchange, Turkey is supposed to receive billions of euros, visa-free travel for its citizens, and fast-tracked EU membership talks.

Now, the EU wants to adapt this outsourcin­g pact to African nations that migrants are leaving to reach Europe, despite criticism that the agreement sends asylum-seekers back to countries that could be unsafe for them.

The bottom line is that the Turkey deal works. The number of people arriving in the Greek islands, for instance, plunged over the last year despite political wrangling over whether Turkey’s government was meeting the conditions for securing the visa-free travel incentive.

EU nations have even fewer scruples about turning away migrants who take the central Mediterran­ean route to Italy since they mostly are job seekers who would be ineligible for asylum.

Libya and Egypt are the main migrant departure points, and pacts with them would probably have the biggest immediate impact.

Muscat wants to build on a deal Italy is trying to reach with Libya by adding EU funds and other support. But Libya has no central authority with the stability to negotiate a long-term agreement.

 ?? Sima Diab / Associated Press ?? Migrants wait to board a rescue ship Friday in the Mediterran­ean about 22 miles north of Sabrata, Libya. The nation has Africa’s nearest stretch of coast to Italy, a favored destinatio­n.
Sima Diab / Associated Press Migrants wait to board a rescue ship Friday in the Mediterran­ean about 22 miles north of Sabrata, Libya. The nation has Africa’s nearest stretch of coast to Italy, a favored destinatio­n.

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