North Italians: No more migrants

Some warn of full shelters as politicians weigh in on influx

Boat people wait to disembark from the Migrant Offshore Aid Station ship Phoenix in the Sicilian port town of Augusta, Italy, on Sunday.
Boat people wait to disembark from the Migrant Offshore Aid Station ship Phoenix in the Sicilian port town of Augusta, Italy, on Sunday.

ROME -- Heartened by recent election successes by an anti-immigrant party, Italian politicians based in the north vowed Sunday not to shelter any more migrants saved at sea, even as thousands more were being rescued in the Mediterranean from smugglers' boats in distress.

Elsewhere in the country, however, corruption investigations have revealed that some local officials gleefully see a cash cow in the shelters.

Over the weekend, nearly 6,000 migrants were rescued by an array of European military vessels, including 2,371 who were saved Sunday from 15 boats that ran into difficulty shortly after smugglers set off with them from Libyan shores, the Italian coast guard said.

Two German military ships took a total of some 1,400 people to Sicilian ports Sunday, a day after they were rescued.

Mayors of Sicilian and other southern towns have warned for months that they've run out of room for migrants, and thousands of the rescued are being resettled in shelters in central and northern Italy while their asylum requests are processed. The migrants flee poverty, persecution and war in Africa, the Middle East and Asia.

Among the north-based Italian politicians refusing to accept more migrants Sunday was newly elected Liguria Gov. Giovanni Toti. Toti's candidacy was backed by his mentor, former center-right Premier Silvio Berlusconi, and by the anti-immigrant Northern League party, which was bolstered by results in balloting for governorships a week ago.

In Lombardy, whose capital is Milan, longtime League leader Gov. Roberto Maroni asked followers on Twitter if they agreed with him that "Lombardy mayors must refuse to welcome clandestine migrants" sent by the national government or else face regional funding cuts as punishment.

Fueling pledges to welcome no more migrants in their regions was a warning Saturday from the United Kingdom's defense secretary, Michael Fallon, that hundreds of thousands of migrants might be in Libya, poised to attempt the perilous sea crossing over the summer months.

A U.N. refugee agency official, Carlotta Sami, called such figures speculation. But Northern League leader Matteo Salvini cited the huge figure when he spoke about "an alarm" of a flood of migrants.

Also pledging his region won't accept more rescued migrants was Veneto Gov. Luca Zaia, a Northern League proponent who scored a resounding victory for a second term in the May 31 vote. "First of all, we must do away with the illusion that we can support and manage a biblical exodus," he said in an interview in Corriere della Sera daily on Sunday.

Zaia contended his northeastern Veneto region, home to many family-run or medium-sized businesses, had no more room for migrants.

According to Interior Ministry figures, as of early May, Veneto was sheltering some 3,000 rescued migrants, or 4 percent of the national total. By comparison, Sicily, where unemployment is chronic, was sheltering 16,000 migrants, 22 percent of the total, while the more affluent region of Lazio, including Rome, had about half that number, for 12 percent, and Maroni's Lombardy had some 6,600, or 9 percent of the total.

While these politicians in the north were saying no to more migrants, corruption investigations have shown that other Italian politicians and local officials see the shelters as a way to make money.

Last week, 44 people, including local politicians from the center-left to the center-right in the Rome area, were arrested for investigation of alleged corruption or tampering with public contract bidding. The Rome-based probe, which netted dozens of arrests a few months ago in an earlier chapter, examined public contracts for social services, including for asylum-seekers at a migrant center in Sicily.

In intercepted phone calls, one suspect was heard referring to migrant shelters as a "cow to milk" for money.

Rome daily la Repubblica on Sunday reported that prosecutors in Florence, the Tuscan capital, and in Bari and Catania in the south were also scrutinizing contracts for feeding and sheltering migrants. It put costs this year at more than $1.1 billion, about 40 percent more than was spent last year, when Italy rescued 170,000 migrants from smugglers' boats in the waters off Libya.

Most of the migrants want to reach family or other support networks in northern Europe. They are supposed to stay in Italy until asylum applications are evaluated, although thousands slip away from the shelters and make their way to Germany, Sweden, the Netherlands and elsewhere.

Meanwhile, British Prime Minister David Cameron said the continued lack of a stable government in Libya is helping to cause the rush of refugees across the Mediterranean Sea, as the Royal Navy set a record by rescuing 1,000 people in one day.

"The two key things that need to happen are a government in Libya and breaking the connection between getting on a boat and getting settlement in Europe," Cameron told reporters at Schloss Elmau, Germany, where he is attending the Group of Seven summit. "We need a government in Libya with whom we can deal."

Foreign ministers from Algeria, Egypt and Italy also called for a peaceful political solution in Libya on Sunday, saying stability in the war-torn country would lead to reduced illegal migration to Europe.

Egypt and Algeria both have long, porous borders with Libya.

Egyptian Foreign Minister Sameh Shoukry stressed at a joint news conference that Libya must form a unity government. He said Egypt supports Libya's internationally recognized government and army in "fighting terrorism."

The U.K.'s assault ship HMS Bulwark, currently assisting rescue efforts in the area, used all eight of its landing craft Sunday to rescue people trying to get to Europe, including at least 10 pregnant women, according to the Ministry of Defence.

Libya is divided between rival governments and militias, while militants allied to the Islamic State grow in power.

Meanwhile Sunday, violence raged inside Libya. An official with the Islamist-allied Misrata militia said forces loyal to the Islamic State attacked a militia checkpoint near the city of Abugrain, capturing and later killing three fighters. The official spoke on condition of anonymity because he wasn't authorized to brief journalists.

Information for this article was contributed by Frances D'Emilio and staff members of The Associated Press and by Robert Hutton of Bloomberg News.

A Section on 06/08/2015

Upcoming Events