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Politics

Italy says 'no' to two migrant ships

July 5, 2019

Rome has blocked the entry of Italian and German vessels carrying more than 110 migrants. The decision paves the way for another standoff with migrant rescue groups after one ship recently forced its way into Lampedusa.

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Migrants aboard the Alan Kurdi vessel
Image: Getty Images/AFP/M. Mirabelli

The Italian government on Friday refused to allow two migrant rescue ships to land, just hours after the country's coast guard intervened to pick up a third group of migrants off the coast of Lampedusa.

Interior Minister Matteo Salvini said the Alan Kurdi, a vessel operated by the German charity Sea-Eye and carrying 65 migrants, could not dock at an Italian port.

"They won't come to Italy, there is a Maltese port available, or they can choose between Tunisia and Germany," Salvini was cited by Italian media as saying.

Greece: Refugees suffering on Samos

Rescue ships wait

The government also denied permission for the ship ALEX, owned by the Italian humanitarian group Mediterranea Saving Humans (MSH), to enter Italian territorial waters.

The vessel picked up 54 migrants from a rubber dinghy off Libya on Thursday.

Malta has said it will take the migrants if Rome takes a similar number already landed in Malta.

But MSH refused to sail the ship to Malta because of the distance and psychological conditions on board.

The migrant rescue ship Alan Kurdi
The rescue ship Alan Kurdi is named after the three-year-old Syrian boy who drowned in the Mediterranean in 2015Image: picture-alliance/AP/Sea-eye.org/F. Heinz

The charity warned the Italian government it was acting unlawfully as Rome can't ban an Italian-flagged shop from entering its waters.

Coast guard intervenes

Salvini's latest remarks come just a day after Italy's coast guard brought ashore 55 migrants rescued in waters off the island of Lampedusa on Thursday.

The migrants had been transferred from the Sea-Watch 3, a German vessel, which rescued them in Libyan waters.

The same ship was involved in a 17-day standoff with the Italian government, which climaxed on Saturday when the captain defied orders and forced her way to a dock in Lampedusa's main port.

She was arrested for disobeying orders and allegedly aiding illegal immigration.

Pressure mounts on Italy

Since the election of a populist government in 2018, Italy has taken a hard line on accepting migrants rescued in the Mediterranean.

Salvini has closed ports to boats arriving with migrants. Italian authorities have insisted that migrants rescued in Libyan waters are the responsibility of the Libyan coast guard, and have accused NGOs who rescue migrants off the North African coast of facilitating people smuggling.

mm/jm (AFP, AP, dpa)

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