Rescued Sea Watch migrants to land in Italy after deal reached

Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte said on Wednesday that 47 rescued migrants aboard the Sea Watch NGO vessel could finally disembark after Italy and six other countries agreed to take them in.


France, Germany, Malta, Portugal, Romania and Luxembourg have all now offered to accept some of the migrants who have been stuck on the Sea Watch 3 vessel since January 19,

“Luxembourg has joined the list of friendly countries that responded to our invitation (to take the migrants), now we are seven countries,” Conte told journalists. “Disembarking will begin in the coming hours.”

The fate of the migrants has been at the centre of a standoff between Italy’s far-right Deputy Prime Minister Matteo Salvini — who has closed the ports to migrants and demanded Europe take its share — and the German NGO Sea Watch.

The aid group on Friday filed an urgent case at the European Human Rights Court against Italy for refusing to allow its ship to dock and the mainly sub-Saharan migrants, including 15 minors, to disembark.

Rescuers say they include youngsters bearing the scars of violence suffered in crisis-hit Libya.

Salvini, who has warned that he was considering legal action against Sea Watch’s crew, refused to be drawn on how many of them Italy would be taking in.

“Once we know with certainty what the others will do, then I’ll say what we will do,” he said.

He has accused the ship of sailing straight for Italy rather than taking the migrants to closer ports in Libya or Tunisia, but the NGO says it tried but failed to get a response from Tripoli or Tunis.

Sea Watch 3 is sailing under a Dutch flag and currently sheltering from bad weather off Sicily after pulling the migrants to safety as they attempted the treacherous Mediterranean crossing.

The Strasbourg-based European Court of Human Rights (ECHR) on Tuesday urged the Italian government to “take all necessary measures, as quickly as possible”, to provide them with medical care, water and food.

– ‘Humanity won’ –

“In the end, humanity won,” said member of parliament Stefania Prestigiacomo from the centre-right Forza Italia party, who had boarded the ship this week as part of a delegation supporting the migrants, in defiance of a direct order from Salvini.

“The loser is the Italian government, which pathetically begged for someone to take in fewer than 50 people, while keeping them hostage at sea,” she said.

People rescued at sea have frequently been left in limbo since Italy’s anti-immigration government came to power in July.

Europe has been wrestling with divisions over how to handle the problem since the migration crisis of 2015 when more than one million people arrived on its shores, many of them fleeing conflict in the Middle East.

French President Emmanuel Macron on Tuesday called for the need for “humane solutions” for migrant rescue operations and urged that migrants be allowed to disembark at the nearest port, in this case “in Italy”.

He said sharing of the care of migrants came after, and that France was committed to that principle.

In a similar case earlier this month, the EU struck a deal to share out between eight European countries nearly 50 migrants stranded aboard two ships, one of which was Sea Watch 3.

The Netherlands on Monday rebuffed Italy’s call to take in the 47 migrants, arguing that the Dutch-flagged ship had acted “on its own initiative”.

Some 113,482 migrants crossed the Mediterranean to reach Europe last year, according to the UN refugee agency, which said 2,262 people lost their lives or went missing making the perilous journey.

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