Italy Prepares Spanish Migrant Convoy, Clashes With France

Italy Prepares Spanish Migrant Convoy, Clashes With France
Vice president of Valencia's regional government Monica Oltra (C), mayor of Valencia Joan Ribo, and health counselor Ana Barcelo attend a meeting to organize the arrival of hundreds of migrants stranded for days on the French NGO's ship Aquarius in Valencia, on June 12, 2018. (Jose Jordan/AFP/Getty Images)
Reuters
6/12/2018
Updated:
6/12/2018

ROME—Italy forged ahead with plans to send hundreds of migrants to Spain in a small naval convoy on June 12 after shutting its own ports to them, sparking a war of words with France that exposed EU tensions over immigration.

Some 629 migrants, including 11 children and seven pregnant women, have been afloat in the central Mediterranean aboard the Aquarius rescue ship since Sunday, when both Italy and Malta refused to let them dock.

On Monday, Spain unexpectedly offered to take in the group of mainly sub-Saharan Africans, who were picked up off the Libyan coast over the weekend. But the Aquarius is heavily overcrowded, making the four-day trip to Spain particularly perilous.

To overcome the problem, two Italian boats moved alongside the Aquarius on Tuesday to share out the migrants before heading west through what are predicted to be stormy seas.

Meanwhile, the only charity vessel left to patrol off the coast of Libya—a staging ground for people smugglers—said a migrant shipwreck had claimed at least 12 lives.

It will take the Aquarius about 10 days to make the trip to Spain and back, leaving the Dutch-flagged Sea Watch 3 alone off the coast of Libya looking for migrants.

A U.S. Navy ship, Trenton, radioed Sea Watch on Tuesday to say it had picked up 12 bodies and 41 survivors from a sinking rubber boat.

“This shows what happens when there are not enough rescue assets at sea,” said Sea Watch spokesman Ruben Neugebauer.

Italy has taken in more than 640,000 mainly African migrants over the past five years. Other EU states have largely ignored pleas by Rome to take in some of the newcomers and share the cost of their care, heightening anti-European and anti-immigrant sentiment in Italy.

Matteo Salvini, Italy’s new interior minister and head of the League, said his move is aimed at forcing other European states to help bear the strain.

However, French President Emmanuel Macron denounced the decision to block the Aquarius, saying that under international law Italy should have taken the migrants in.

“There is a degree of cynicism and irresponsibility in the Italian government’s behavior with regards to this dramatic humanitarian situation,” government spokesman Benjamin Griveaux quoted Macron as telling his cabinet.

Gabriel Attal, a spokesman for Macron’s party, went further, telling Public Senat TV: “The Italian position makes me vomit.”

Italian Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte responded angrily.

“Italy cannot accept hypocritical lessons from countries that have always preferred to turn their backs when it comes to immigration,” Conte said in a statement.

Hungarian Praise

Italy also received backing from Hungary’s right-wing Prime Minister Viktor Orban, who is a friend of Salvini and is known for his fiercely anti-immigrant rhetoric.

“It was so depressing to hear for years that it is impossible to protect maritime borders,” Orban told reporters in Budapest. “Willpower has returned to Italy.”

Even as Italy worked to dispatch the charity ship, an Italian coast guard vessel with 937 migrants aboard was heading north from the Libyan coast and was expected to dock in Sicily on Wednesday.

“No one should dare brand Italy or its government as inhumane or xenophobic,” Transport Minister Danilo Toninelli told Radio Capital.

The Sea Watch met the Trenton and was asked to pick up the survivors and bodies, but the group refused to bring them on board without a written guarantee from Italy.

“We have the capacity to take them onboard, but we will only do so if there is a written statement by Italian authorities that we will be able to disembark them within 36 hours,” Neugebauer said. “We cannot go to Spain.”

Doctors Without Borders (MSF), which is operating the Aquarius alongside SOS Mediterranee, urged Rome to drop plans for the lengthy trip to Spain for its migrant passengers.

“This plan would mean already exhausted rescued people would endure four more days’ travel at sea,” it said on Twitter. “MSF calls for people’s safety to come before politics.”

Salvini’s League scored its best-ever result in March national elections, partly on pledges to deport hundreds of thousands of migrants and halt the flow of newcomers, and has formed a coalition with the 5-Star Movement.

By Crispian Balmer and Steve Scherer

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