The Borneo Post

Italy migrant arrivals hit record as eight die in Med

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ROME: At least eight people were confirmed dead Tuesday and many more were missing after a new series of boat tragedies left Italy on the verge of a record year for migrant arrivals.

Confi rming the latest fatalities in what is already a record year for migrant deaths in the Mediterran­ean, Italy’s coastguard said 1,397 people had been saved in 12 operations between Monday evening and Tuesday afternoon.

The rescues will take the number of migrants to have arrived in Italy by sea this year to almost 170,000, a whisker short of the previous record set in 2014.

A coastguard boat recovered seven bodies and oversaw the rescue of 182 people from a stricken rubber dinghy in waters off Libya.

The other confi rmed victim, a man, died on the Topaz Responder, a boat operated by Malta- based charity MOAS with a Red Cross medical team onboard.

Three others were in a critical condition: a woman who was helicopter­ed off a coastguard boat after suffering cardiac arrest and two people on the Responder who were transferre­d to coastguard speedboats suffering from hypothermi­a.

MOAS said survivors’ accounts suggested that ‘ many’ people were unaccounte­d for, including the mother of two children who survived.

The organisati­on said it had helped rescue some 600 people in four difficult operations, including 117 from one sinking dinghy.

The vessel of choice for people trafficker­s operating out of Libya, such dinghies typically have between 120 and 150 migrants crammed onto them.

“The doctors managed to revive several people with hypothermi­a but it was too late for one of them,” MOAS spokeswoma­n Maria Teresa Sette told AFP.

The doctors managed to revive several people with hypothermi­a but it was too late for one of them.

The coastguard said the 12 stricken boats assisted in the latest rescues included one larger wooden vessel that was carrying 450-500 people, six smaller wooden boats with a few dozen people on board and five dinghies.

Unusually, the survivors included ‘ many families’ from Syria, according to MOAS, as well as people from the Palestinia­n territorie­s, Lebanon and Sudan.

Of late, migrants leaving Libya have been overwhelmi­ngly from sub- Saharan or East Africa with a much- anticipate­d surge in the numbers of refugees from Syria’s war having failed to materialis­e following the de facto closure of the Turkey- Greece migrant route earlier this year.

The latest victims will add to a total of 4,655 migrants confi rmed to have died or disappeare­d in the Mediterran­ean so far this year, according to counts by the Internatio­nal Organisati­on for Migration and the UN refugee agency.

The rescued survivors will add to a total of 168,544 migrants who have been registered at Italian ports in 2016. The highest previous annual total was 170,100, in 2014.

The vast majority of the migrants landing in Italy come from Africa and begin their sea crossings from Libya, typically paying trafficker­s several hundred dollars for the often perilous crossing.

With Italy’s neighbours having tightened their borders, the numbers being housed in reception facilities spread across the country have risen to an unpreceden­ted total of over 176,000, prompting howls of protest from some local authoritie­s.

Manymigran­tsarrivein­Italywith the intention of travelling north, often to try and rejoin relatives, with Germany and Sweden among the popular destinatio­ns.

One such man, thought to be from Eritrea, died overnight while trying to board a freight train travelling from Italy to Austria via the Brenner tunnel through the Alps.

The man was hit by a train moving in the opposite direction near the main station in Bolzano, close to the border.

Police said the incident was the fi rst of its kind for Bolzano. Recent weeks have seen several migrants killed by cars while trying to cross from Italy into France at their coastal border. — AFP

Maria Teresa Sette, MOAS spokeswoma­n

 ??  ?? Migrants wait to disembark from Italian Coast Guard patrol vessel Diciotti in the Sicilian harbour of Catania, Italy. — Reuters photo
Migrants wait to disembark from Italian Coast Guard patrol vessel Diciotti in the Sicilian harbour of Catania, Italy. — Reuters photo

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