Migrants Stranded Aboard Rescue Ship Allowed to Enter Italy

Reuters
1/30/2019
Updated:
1/30/2019

MILAN—Italian Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte said 47 migrants who have been blocked at sea off Sicily for 11 days on a rescue ship will be allowed to come ashore on Jan. 30, ending the latest migrant standoff.

“In a few hours, they will begin to disembark,” Conte told reporters in Milan. The migrants have been on the vessel since they were rescued off the Libyan coast.

Italy’s populist government, which took office last year, has closed its ports to humanitarian vessels in a bid to force European Union partners to take a share of those rescued in the Mediterranean.

The Dutch-flagged Sea-Watch 3, which is run by a German humanitarian group, had been moored off the coast of Sicily as it waited for a safe port. Some 13 minors are among those on board and the long wait has taken a toll, Sea Watch said on Jan. 30.

“Some people have stopped eating, shrunk into themselves, others have become emotionally unstable,” Frank Dorner, the ship’s doctor, said in a statement.

Five European countries agreed to accept some of the migrants, Conte said Jan. 29, identifying Germany, France, Portugal, Malta, and Romania. On Jan. 30, he said Luxembourg and Italy would also welcome some of them.

The leaders of the two parties in the coalition government had pressed the Netherlands, France, and Germany to accept the migrants this week. The Netherlands refused, saying the EU must draft a plan that automatically redistributes migrants saved at sea.

It’s the second time in a month that the Sea-Watch 3 has been stranded at sea with rescued migrants and no safe port.

The previous standoff ended after 19 days with the migrants allowed ashore in Malta and an agreement among eight EU countries, including Italy, to subsequently take them in.

By Lisa Di Giuseppe