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Over 1,000 migrants arrive on Italian island

May 9, 2021

Packed boats carrying hundreds of people reached the tiny island of Lampedusa as migrant routes resume. Humanitarian rescue missions have been hampered by Italian authorities.

A boat sailing of the shore of Lampedusa
Around 6,000 migrants and refugees have landed in Italy this year so farImage: Reuters/M. Buccarello

Several boats carrying an estimated 1,200 people were intercepted in the vicinity of the Italian island of Lampedusa on Sunday, Italian media reported.

The small island, situated to the south of Malta and far closer to the Tunisian and Libyan coasts than the rest of Italy, is one of the main landing points for migrants and refugees making their way to Europe.

The mayor of Lampedusa, Salvatore Martello, said that migration routes in the Mediterranean Sea were opening again.

"Migrants arrivals are resuming alongside good weather," he told state broadcaster RAI.

"We need to restart discussions about the immigration issue," he added.

Sicily migrant crisis

04:11

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Several ships intercepted

According to Italian media, some nine boats were intercepted or landed on the island on Sunday.

A drifting fishing vessel carrying almost 400 people of different nationalities, including women and children, landed on the island in the morning.

A 20-meter boat with some 325 people on board was intercepted by Italian police around 8 miles (13 kilometers) off the coast of Lampedusa.

Another vessel carrying 90 people was also intercepted close to the island, Italian news agency ANSA reported.

The boats were intercepted and escorted by patrol vessels belonging to the Italian tax police who deal with smuggling.

The arrivals were tested for coronavirus.

Italian authorities impound humanitarian vessels

There were no rescue boats in the area at the time as one of the vessels belonging to the German humanitarian organization Sea-Watch remained impounded by authorities on the island of Sicily.

Germany's Sea-Eye 4 sets out for Mediterranean

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The "Sea-Watch 4," which was previously held in the port of Palermo for over six months, was found to have too many life jackets and an insufficient sewage system for the number of people it could potentially rescue.

Activists have claimed that the order to hold the ship is just an excuse to block its activities. Another ship belonging to the organization was impounded by the Italian coastguard in March, over safety issues.

The Alan Kurdi ship from another German humanitarian group, Sea-Eye, was expected to reach the area on Sunday, Spanish agency EFE reported.

Difficult and dangerous route

The Mediterranean route between the north African coast and Italy is one of the most dangerous in the world. Dozens of people have drowned this year trying to cross the dinghies or small wooden boats.

Since 2015, almost 530,000 migrants have reached Italian shores, with the majority arriving between 2015 and 2017.

Numbers have declined in recent years, but some 6,000 have made the journey this year to date, according to the International Organization for Migration (IOM).

The arrival of people fleeing poverty and conflict has fueled anti-immigration sentiment and the rise of far-right political parties across Europe.

Sicily migrant crisis

03:49

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ab/rs (Reuters, EFE, AFP)

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