Italy again calls for EU help as 40 more migrants die

Published May 6, 2015
A footage which emerged on Tuesday shows a Mediterranean Sea rescue of migrants on a sinking rubber boat desperately clambering up ropes and a ladder from a cargo ship that came to their aid in the sea between Libya and Sicily, Italy, on Sunday.—AP
A footage which emerged on Tuesday shows a Mediterranean Sea rescue of migrants on a sinking rubber boat desperately clambering up ropes and a ladder from a cargo ship that came to their aid in the sea between Libya and Sicily, Italy, on Sunday.—AP

ROME: Around 40 migrants died when their inflatable boat sank off the coast of Italy, which on Tuesday renewed an appeal to the EU for help in managing a relentless wave of arrivals.

Survivors of the tragedy reported 137 people were on the vessel when it either deflated or exploded shortly before a spate of rescue operations this weekend that saw the Italian navy and coastguard save almost 6,000 people on the sea.

“Some (of the survivors from the inflatable boat) said ‘very many’ died, others said ‘around 40’”, Giovanna di Benedetto of Save the Children said on Tuesday.

Italian leaders anticipate a record number of arrivals on their southern shores between now and September, with last year’s total of 170,000 already an unprecedented number.

“It’s not enough to add 10 or so boats to those (operated) by the Italians,” said Italian Foreign Minister Paolo Gentiloni.

He also demanded the European Union help in the fight against human trafficking and make reforms to the process of granting asylum to migrants.

At least 10 people died in recent shipwrecks, adding to an estimated total of more than 1,750 migrants who have perished in the waters between Libya and Italy since the start of this year.

The International Organisation for Migration reported last month that the toll represented a 30-fold increase over 2014.

Gentiloni said that promises made at April’s EU summit after a migrant boat disaster left 750 dead had to be honoured.

“A European emergency cannot continue to have only Italian responses,” he added.

This weekend’s surge in the number of boats leaving Libya was put down to the fine weather and calm sea conditions.

Baby born aboard ship: The survivors whose harrowing experience was reported on Tuesday were part of a group of close to 200 migrants who were on two separate boats and were rescued in recent days in waters off Sicily. The survivors arrived on Tuesday in Catania on the east coast of Sicily, on the cargo ship “Zeran”, which also carried five bodies.

On Monday more than 3,000 migrants landed in southern Italian ports, including a baby girl born on board the Italian navy patrol ship Bettica.

Published in Dawn, May 6th, 2015

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