Europe migrant crisis: Italian state of emergency to tackle migrant boats

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The Italian coastguard approaches a boat carrying migrants in the Ionian Sea, close to Sicily and Calabria on 10 AprilImage source, EPA-EFE/REX/Shutterstock
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The Italian coastguard approaches a boat carrying migrants in the Ionian Sea on 10 April

Italian ministers have called a six-month state of emergency in response to a rise in migrant numbers crossing the Mediterranean from North Africa.

The decision frees up €5m (£4.4m) in funds and coincides with the arrival of 3,000 migrants in three days.

A number of boats have landed on the Italian island of Lampedusa and the coastguard has rescued some 2,000 people since Friday.

The UN has recorded the highest number of migrant deaths since 2017.

Its migration body said 441 deaths had been recorded in the Central Mediterranean in the first three months of 2023. It warned that delays in state-led rescues saw at least 127 people dying, while in another deadly incident there had been a complete lack of response.

In the latest sinking, at least 10 people from sub-Saharan Africa drowned off the Tunisian coast, according to the national guard. Dozens more were rescued after the accident on Tuesday off the port city of Sfax.

Tunisia has become the biggest point of departure for migrant boats in recent months and another four deaths were reported at the weekend off Sfax, some 185km (115 miles) away from Lampedusa.

Tunisia is in the grip of a financial crisis and the sharp rise in sea crossings came after President Kais Saied accused sub-Saharan migrants of causing a crime wave, prompting UN accusations of hate speech.

Migrant arrivals to Italy have risen sharply compared with the same period last year, despite efforts by Italy's right-wing coalition government to clamp down on irregular migration. A fishing boat carrying 700 rescued migrants was due to arrive in port in Sicily on Wednesday afternoon.

Sea and Civil Protection Minister Nello Musumeci spoke of a 300% increase in migrant flows and said it was an "absolute emergency" that had put Italy's infrastructure at risk. "We are talking about a phenomenon never seen in the past. The islands alone cannot deal with this state of emergency,"

The state of emergency would not solve the problem, the minister stressed. It required a responsible intervention by the European Union.

Besides extra funding, it is unclear how the Italian measure will tackle rising numbers in the Mediterranean, but reports say officials will be able to speed up reception procedures and repatriation of those not allowed to remain in Italy.

The Italian coastguard has been escorting two boats in the Ionian Sea off Sicily.

One of the boats carrying 400 people is believed to have set out from Tobruk in Libya and the coastguard said difficult sea conditions were affecting the rescue.

It was last located by an unofficial hotline for migrants called Alarm Phone in the Ionian Sea east of Sicily on Tuesday. "[People on board] report several medical emergencies, water filling the vessel and no fuel left," the hotline said, describing the situation as dramatic.

A second boat also under coastguard escort is carrying around 800 people. It is unclear where the boat set out from and the Italian coastguard said it was overcrowded.

An urgent alarm was first raised with the authorities of Italy, Greece and Malta on Sunday when the boat was found adrift in Maltese waters, Alarm Phone said.

German non-governmental organisation Sea-Watch International said two merchant vessels near the boat had been ordered not to help with rescue efforts by Malta while the boat was in Maltese waters. Instead, one of the ships had been allowed to supply it with fuel and water.

The Armed Forces of Malta told The Malta Independent that "no rescue was requested by the people on board".

According to the International Organization for Migration's Missing Migrants Project, the 441 deaths it has recorded in the Central Mediterranean this year is likely to be an underestimate.

"I fear that these deaths have been normalised," warned IOM Director General António Vitorino. He said delays and gaps in search and rescues led by states were costing human lives.

More than 20,000 people had now died on the Central Mediterranean route since 2014, he added.

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