The Star Malaysia - Star2

Rememberin­g a tragedy

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THE remains of the worst known Mediterran­ean migrant shipwreck, in which up to 900 people died, is being exhibited at the prestigiou­s Venice Biennale art fair, which opened last weekend.

The blue and red fishing boat was carrying almost 1,000 migrants when it struck a Portuguese cargo ship that was coming to its aid off the coast of Libya during the night of April 18-19, 2015.

The boat sank quickly as the cargo ship’s horrified crew raced to save 28 people.

Swiss artist Christoph Buchel obtained permission from Italian authoritie­s and a group that represents the victims to transport the hull to Venice as part of a project called Barca Nostra (Our Boat).

It is being shown in a shipyard by itself, without any explanatio­n.

“It is a quiet site, sheltered from noise, an invitation to silence and meditation,” said Paolo Baratta, the head of the Venice Biennale.

Italy spent around Us$12mil (Rm50mil) to raise the wreck from a depth of 370m and transport it to Sicily so the victims could be identified and given a proper burial.

A large rectangula­r opening was cut in the hull to allow workers to recover hundreds of bodies, with dozens of medical examiners called in to examine the remains of 800-900 people.

Travel documents from Bangladesh, Eritrea, Ethiopia, Gambia, Guinea-bissau, Ivory Coast, Mali, Senegal, Somalia and Sudan, were found, along with small packets of earth from some migrants homelands and a school report that a teenager had sewn into their clothes.

“It seems we are looking at the worst massacre ever seen in the Mediterran­ean,” sais UNHCR spokeswoma­n Carlotta Sami at the time.

The disaster provoked an emergency EU summit as Europe tried to control a migrant crisis that has presented the union with one

of its biggest challenges ever.

The victims now lie in various Sicilian cemeteries, and it was decided to not destroy the boat but integrate it into a Sicilian “memory garden”. – AFP

 ??  ?? A woman walks past the wreck of the Barca
Nostra fishing boat, which sank in the Mediterran­ean sea in 2015 with 700 migrants on board. It is on display at the Venice Biennale. —AFP
A woman walks past the wreck of the Barca Nostra fishing boat, which sank in the Mediterran­ean sea in 2015 with 700 migrants on board. It is on display at the Venice Biennale. —AFP

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