Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Many questions still unanswered 1 week after Italy shipwreck

Prosecutor­s have launched 2 investigat­ions

- By Renata Brito and Paolo Santalucia

STECCATO DI CUTRO, Italy — “Italy here we come!” cheered the young men, in Urdu and Pashto, as they filmed themselves standing on a boat sailing in bright blue waters.

They were among around 180 migrants — Afghans, Pakistanis, Syrians, Iranians, Palestinia­ns, Somalis and others — who left Turkey hoping for a better, or simply safer, life in Europe.

Days later, dozens of them were dead. So far, 70 bodies have been recovered from the Feb. 26 shipwreck near the small beach town of Steccato di Cutro, but only 80 survivors have been found, indicating that the death toll was higher. On Sunday, firefighte­r divers spotted a further body in the Ionian Sea and were working to bring it ashore, state TV said.

The tragedy has highlighte­d the lesser- known migration route from Turkey to Italy. It also brought into focus hardening Italian and European migration policies, which have since 2015 shifted away from search and rescue, prioritizi­ng instead border surveillan­ce. Questions are also being asked of the Italian government about why the coast guard wasn’t deployed until it was too late.

Based on court documents, testimony from survivors and relatives and statements by authoritie­s, the AP has reconstruc­ted what is known of the events that led to the shipwreck and the questions left unanswered.

The fateful journey

In the early hours of Feb. 22, the migrants — including dozens of families with small children — boarded a leisure boat on a beach near Izmir following a truck journey from Istanbul and a forest crossing by foot.

They set out from the shore. But just three hours into their voyage, the vessel suffered an engine failure. Still in high seas, an old wooden gulet — a traditiona­l Turkish style of boat — arrived as a replacemen­t.

The smugglers and their assistants told the migrants to hide below deck as they continued on their journey west. Without life vests or seats, they crammed on the floor, going out for air, or to relieve themselves, only briefly. Survivors said the second boat also had engine problems, stopping several times along the way.

Three days later, on Feb. 25 at 10:26 p.m. a European Union Border and Coast Guard plane patrolling the Ionian sea spotted a boat heading toward the Italian coast. The agency, known as Frontex, said the vessel “showed no signs of distress” and was navigating at 6 knots, with “good” buoyancy.

Frontex sent an email to Italian authoritie­s at 11:03 p.m. reporting one person on the upper deck and possibly more people below, detected by thermal cameras. No lifejacket­s could be seen. The email also mentioned that a satellite phone call had been made from the boat to Turkey.

In response to the Frontex sighting, the case was classified as an “activity of the maritime police.” Italy’s Guardia di Finanza, or financial police, which also has a border and customs role, dispatched two patrols to “intercept the vessel.”

As the Turkish boat approached Italy’s Calabrian coast on Saturday evening, some of the migrants on the boat were allowed to message family, to inform them of their imminent arrival and release the 8,000-euro fee that had been agreed upon with the smugglers.

The men navigating the boat told the anxious passengers they needed to wait a few more hours for disembarka­tion, to avoid getting caught, according to survivors’ testimony to investigat­ors.

The young victims

There were dozens of young children on board the boat. Almost none survived. The body of a 3year-old was recovered Saturday.

Among those who lived was a Syrian father and his eldest child, but his wife and three other children did not. The body of his youngest, age 5, was still missing four days later.

Shahida Raza, an athlete from Pakistan, died in the tragedy. She had hoped to reach Europe so that she could eventually bring her disabled son for the medical treatment he could not access back home.

One Afghan man drove down from Germany, searching for his 15-year-old nephew who had contacted family saying he was in Italy. But the boy also died before setting foot on land.

The uncle asked that his name, and that of his nephew not be published as he had yet to inform the boy’s father.

The baby-faced teenager had shared a video with his family during his sea voyage, with apparently good weather.

His mother had died two years ago, and with the return of the Taliban to power, the family fled to Iran. The boy later continued to Turkey from where he tried multiple times to cross into the EU.

“Europe is the only place where at least you can be respected as a human being,” he said. “Everyone knows that it is 100% dangerous, but they gamble with their lives because they know if they make it they might be able to live.”

The aftermath

Prosecutor­s have launched two investigat­ions — one into the suspected smugglers and another looking at whether there were delays by Italian authoritie­s in responding to the migrant boat.

A Turkish man and two Pakistani men, among the 80 survivors, have been detained, suspected of being smugglers or their accomplice­s. A fourth suspect, a Turkish national, is on the run.

Particular attention has been focused on why the coast guard was never sent to check on the boat.

A day after the shipwreck, Frontex told AP it had spotted a “heavily overcrowde­d” boat and reported it to Italian authoritie­s. In a second statement, though, Frontex clarified that only one person had been visible on deck but that its thermal cameras — “and other signs” — indicated there could be more people below.

In an interview with AP, retired coast guard admiral Vittorio Alessandro said the coast guard’s boats are made to withstand rough seas and that they should have gone out. “If not to rescue, at least to check whether the boat needed any assistance.”

The coast guard said Frontex alerted Italian authoritie­s in charge of “law enforcemen­t,” copying the Italian Coast Guard “for their awareness” only. Frontex said it is up to national authoritie­s to classify events as search and rescue.

“The issue is simple in its tragic nature: No emergency communicat­ion from Frontex reached our authoritie­s. We were not warned that this boat was in danger of sinking,” Italian Premier Giorgia Meloni said on Saturday.

 ?? Luigi Navarra/Associated Press ?? A view of part of the wreckage of a capsized boat that washed ashore at a beach near Cutro, southern Italy, on Feb. 27. Nearly 70 people died in last week’s shipwreck on Italy’s Calabrian coast along a lesser-known migration route from Turkey to Italy, for which smugglers charge around 8,000 euros per person.
Luigi Navarra/Associated Press A view of part of the wreckage of a capsized boat that washed ashore at a beach near Cutro, southern Italy, on Feb. 27. Nearly 70 people died in last week’s shipwreck on Italy’s Calabrian coast along a lesser-known migration route from Turkey to Italy, for which smugglers charge around 8,000 euros per person.

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