At least 29 migrants have died of hypothermia (extreme cold) on board Italian coastguard vessels after being picked up from an inflatable boat en route Lampedusa, the chief health official on the island of Lampedusa has said.
They were part of a group of 105 people found on board an inflatable boat about 160km (100 miles) from the Italian territory.
The migrants had summoned help via satellite telephone after getting into trouble.
Two patrol boats picked up 105 migrants late on Sunday from the boat drifting in extreme sea conditions, with waves as high as eight metres (26 feet) and temperatures just a few degrees above zero, the coastguard said in a statement.
The migrants then spent about 18 hours on the decks of the small patrol boats taking them to Lampedusa, buffeted by high winds and spray. At least 29 died en route, Lampedusa’s mayor, Giusi Nicolini, said.
The number of dead may still rise, she said. One migrant had been taken by helicopter to the island of Sicily in critical condition, and the second patrol boat has yet to reach port.
Nicolini blamed the closure of Italy’s search-and-rescue mission, known as Mare Nostrum, last year for the tragedy. Since then no navy ships capable of keeping large numbers of migrants below deck have patrolled the waters near the Libyan coast.
“Mare Nostrum was an emergency solution to a humanitarian crisis, so closing it was a huge and intolerable step backward,” Nicolini said. Human rights groups repeatedly warned that ending the mission would endanger lives.
“The small patrol boats were completely swallowed by the waves during the trip back. If Mare Nostrum were still going, the migrants would have been given shelter inside a large ship within an hour.”
The patrol boats sent from Lampedusa are small vessels that ride low to the water so crew members can pull people in. But they cannot accommodate many below deck.
Mare Nostrum was abandoned partly because of public concern about the €114m (£85m) cost of the mission in its first year.
The EU now runs a border control operation, called Triton, with fewer ships and a much smaller area of operation.
Civil war in Syria and anarchy in Libya swelled the number of people crossing the Mediterranean last year. Many paid smugglers $1,000-$2,000 to travel.
The UN refugee agency says 160,000 seaborne migrants arrived in Italy by November 2014 and a further 40,000 in Greece. Thousands have died attempting the journey.
“To organised crime it’s not important if people make it across the sea alive or dead,” Nicolini said. “But now, without Mare Nostrum, it’s as if no one, and not just the criminals, cares if they live or die.” - BBC
The risk people take
ReplyDeleteToo bad
DeleteBLOG ANALYSER: It is well with u Africa
Deletewhy always us. It is well.
ReplyDeleteNa by force 2 travel.
DeleteHmmmmmmm
I wonder oh
DeleteIt is well
ReplyDeleteObobo Oyibo via backyard goes wrong.
ReplyDeleteRIP to d deads
Quick recovery to the sick.
Learn your Lessons !
Intending migrants, don't go through the back doors or windows.
Follow all legal immigration arrangements.
He / She that have ears, let him / her HEAR ! ! !
Eeiya so so sad..
ReplyDeleteRip to the dead *smh*
And the ranting posts disappeared.
ReplyDeletePost*
ReplyDeleteThe end of a hustler
ReplyDeleteEyaaaaaah
ReplyDeleteStella ukwu sugar
ReplyDeleteThat is a big fat lie
Every year, these wicked people will take irregular migrants and drown them at sea.
There are several cases like this. it is time for people to protest against this inhuman treatment to irregular migrants by the government of Italy.
I know it is expensive to deport all of them but why drown them?
That is wicked. How about their right to life?
XOXO MYSTERY
U just lied my dear. They are illegal immigrants finding greener pasture through this terrible means. Many of them travel via desert to Libya, and then through d sea to Europe, risking their precious life! Abeg who force dem comot for their country? Hun?
DeleteMany of them must be my Ibo guys and Edo girls! Who can bet?Have been taking risk since 1914.
ReplyDeleteNawa o. Greener pasture hunt av landed dem into dia deaths. Rip all.
ReplyDeleteThe risk is just too much,OMG!just to reach Europe
ReplyDeleteSad.
ReplyDeletePeople taking all sorts of risks to travel out,God pls bless my hustle
ReplyDeleteEhh yaa.
ReplyDeleteIts a pity
RIP to da dead.
ReplyDelete~@iamjbankz SA to President Jonathan 2015~
In the pursuit of happiness.
ReplyDeleteGod help us!
Hmmmm does going to Italy worth this risk? Let alone travel by small boat and ballons. They take to the street beging in the same place. Does it really worth the risk
ReplyDelete