Las Vegas Review-Journal

EU nations ramp up rescue efforts in aftermath of migrant drownings

Government­s remain at odds over solution to immigratio­n issue

- By ALASTAIR MACDONALD AND KOLE CASULE REUtERS

BRUSSELS — British and German warships made ready to sail for waters off Libya as Europe ramped up rescue operations in the Mediterran­ean after up to 900 desperate migrants drowned last weekend on a boat heading for Italy.

Yet hours after European Union leaders agreed in Brussels on Thursday to increase funding for EU maritime missions and pledged more ships and aircraft, 14 clandestin­e migrants were killed when a train plowed into dozens of Somalis and Afghans making their way in darkness along a rail track in a Macedonian gorge.

The incident highlighte­d the variety of routes that growing numbers are taking to escape war and poverty in Asia, Africa and the Middle East and chance their luck in a wealthy region that offers, at best, a chilly welcome. EU government­s remain deeply at odds over how to deal with migrants.

After the sinking of a packed fishing vessel last weekend nearly doubled the death toll at sea this year to almost 2,000, EU leaders responded to a public outcry by reversing sharp cuts in search and rescue operations — though voters’ wariness of immigratio­n means few are willing to take in many more refugees.

Britain’s helicopter-carrying flagship Bulwark, currently near Istanbul, will head for the area between Libya and Italy on Sunday, the government said. However, Prime Minister David Cameron, who faces a threat from anti-immigratio­n populists as he seeks re-election in less than two weeks, stressed when he offered it on Thursday that few of those rescued would come to Britain.

Germany, favored destinatio­n for many migrants who make it to Europe, said on Friday it would have a frigate and a supply vessel in the area within days to comb the sea for refugees.

Nearly 40,000 have made it to Italy so far this year, though Germany and its neighbors complain that Italy and Greece do too little to track those who arrive and then swiftly head north.

EU border agency Frontex says 276,000 people entered the bloc illegally last year, more than double the number in 2013. Sea crossings to Italy quadrupled to 170,000 as anarchy in Libya opened opportunit­ies for people-smuggling gangs. Some 43,000 came into the EU last year via the Balkans, but 32,000 arrived in just the first three months of this year, Frontex data shows. DEATH ON THE RAILWAY

Near the Macedonian town of Veles, a Reuters photograph­er saw body parts, clothing and food strewn along a remote stretch of rail line beside a river on Friday — part of a migrant route that stretches back thousands of miles into places of war and hunger and on toward Germany and Europe’s prosperous north.

“The train was unable to stop before hitting and running over some of them,” said a prosecutor. About 50 people, mostly from Somalia and Afghanista­n, had been on the track, he added.

The United Nations, which was critical of the EU response off Libya, welcomed the summit decision that EU officials said will effectivel­y restore the same level of help as a mission run by Italy which picked up over 100,000 last year but which was replaced by a more modest EU-run operation last October. COURT HEARING

In the Sicilian port of Catania, the captain of the migrant boat that sank appeared before an Italian judge on Friday after prosecutor­s asked for a charge of homicide.

Mohammed Ali Malek, 27, has denied that he was in charge of the heavily overloaded fishing boat that capsized with hundreds of African and Bangladesh­i migrants locked in its lower decks.

“He says he’s a migrant like all the others and he paid his fare to go on the boat,” his lawyer said.

The Tunisian showed little emotion as the preliminar­y hearing began behind closed doors. A 25-year-old Syrian, Mahmud Bikhit, who prosecutor­s believe was a crew member, has accused Malek of being in charge of the vessel when it collided with a merchant ship coming to its aid and capsized. Bikhit denied being a crew member.

Only 28 people survived the disaster, believed to be the heaviest loss of life on the Mediterran­ean in decades.

 ?? JON NAZCA/ REUTERS ?? People observe a minute of silence Friday for the nearly 900 migrants who died Sunday after their boat capsized in the Mediterran­ean, during a protest against the current immigratio­n policy of the European Union.
JON NAZCA/ REUTERS People observe a minute of silence Friday for the nearly 900 migrants who died Sunday after their boat capsized in the Mediterran­ean, during a protest against the current immigratio­n policy of the European Union.

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