Gulf Today

Over 1,000 migrants arrive in Italy in hours: NGO

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ROME: More than a thousand migrants arrived in Italy within a few hours while hundreds of others, rescued by humanitari­an vessels, were waiting for a port to receive them, NGOS and authoritie­s said on Sunday.

Between January 1 and July 22, 34,000 people arrived in Italy by sea compared with 25,500 during the same period in 2021 and 10,900 in 2020, Italy’s interior ministry said.

More than 600 people atempting to cross the Mediterran­ean on board a driting fishing vessel were rescued on Saturday by a merchant vessel and coastguard­s off Calabria, at the southern tip of Italy.

They were landed in several ports in Sicily.

The authoritie­s also recovered five bodies of migrants who had died in so far undetermin­ed circumstan­ces.

On the island of Lampedusa, some 522 people from Afghanista­n, Pakistan, Sudan, Ethiopia and Somalia, among others, arrived from the late hours of Saturday in 15 different boats from Tunisia and Libya.

According to the Italian media, the island’s reception centre has been overwhelme­d.

With a capacity of 250-300 people, it currently hosts 1,200, according to the Ansa news agency.

Offshore NGOS continued to recover hundreds of migrants in distress in the Mediterran­ean.

Seawatch reported that it had carried out four rescue operations on Saturday.

“On board Seawatch3, we have 428 people, including women and children, a woman nine months pregnant and a patient with severe burns,” it said on its Twiter account.

Oceanvikin­g, operated by non-government­al organisati­on SOS Mediterran­ean, reported that it had recovered 87 people, including 57 unaccompan­ied minors, who were crammed onto “an overcrowde­d inflatable boat in distress in internatio­nal waters off Libya.”

The Central Mediterran­ean migration route is the most dangerous in the world.

The Internatio­nal organisati­on for Migration

estimates that 990 people have died and disappeare­d since the beginning of the year.

Separately, on Saturday German NGO search and rescue ship Sea-watch rescued over 400 migrants, including several young children and two pregnant woman, travelling on four overcrowde­d boats. According to Sea-watch, flat seas and lack of wind have helped arrivals of migrants to the Italian coasts.

In Lampedusa, over 400 migrants have disembarke­d since last night, ater a further 350 people on Saturday, challengin­g the migrant reception centre on the island, which is dealing with over 1,000 people.

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