More people evacuated from rescue ship

‘Land in view and no solution’ for 134 migrants near Italian island, aid group says

Migrants are evacuated by Italian Coast guards from the Open Arms Spanish humanitarian boat off the coast of the Sicilian island of Lampedusa, southern Italy, Thursday, Aug.15, 2019.  (AP Photo/Francisco Gentico)
Migrants are evacuated by Italian Coast guards from the Open Arms Spanish humanitarian boat off the coast of the Sicilian island of Lampedusa, southern Italy, Thursday, Aug.15, 2019. (AP Photo/Francisco Gentico)

ROME -- Three ailing migrants and a family member were evacuated Friday from a Spanish rescue ship anchored near a southern Italian island, but 134 others remained stuck on the boat as Italy's political battle over migration intensified.

The humanitarian ship Open Arms had rescued 147 migrants in the Mediterranean Sea near Libya two weeks ago and won a legal battle to enter Italy's territorial waters despite a ban by right-wing Interior Minister Matteo Salvini. Yet most of the migrants remained aboard the ship as Salvini stuck to his resolve to keep humanitarian vessels from docking in Italy.

"I'm not giving up, you can be sure of that," Salvini vowed Friday in a tweet.

Despite offers by Spain and five other European Union nations on Thursday to take in the migrants, it was unclear when or how the standoff might end. The Open Arms was anchored a few hundred yards off Lampedusa island, and one emergency worker said tempers among migrants were fraying as the delays dragged on.

Late Thursday, an Italian coast guard dinghy had ferried to shore nine migrants, including several who were evacuated for psychological reasons.

Open Arms, which carried out the first rescue of this group of migrants on Aug. 1, described the situation on board Friday as "unsustainable" and appealed for "the urgent and immediate evacuation of all."

"Land in view and no solution. The rights of 134 persons are trampled every additional minute," the aid group tweeted. "If European politics don't know how to find solutions, who must do it?"

Alessandro Di Benedetto, a psychologist for the charity group Emergency, who had gone aboard to speak with the migrants, said Friday that several had exhibited acts of self-harm or expressed thoughts about suicide, while others were starting to take out their anger at being kept aboard on fellow migrants.

Italian Premier Giuseppe Conte earlier this week asked Salvini to let all 32 minors on the ship off, but the minister hasn't complied.

State TV and other Italian media reported Friday night that lawyers for Open Arms had submitted a complaint with prosecutors in Sicily alleging that the migrants were being held hostage. Prosecutors were investigating their complaint, according to the reports.

Salvini and other ministers in the past have been investigated on accusations of kidnapping in previous standoffs in which Italian ports were kept closed to the rescue ships. In one such investigation, the the Italian Senate voted earlier this year against lifting Salvini's parliamentary immunity from prosecution. None of the inquiries has resulted in any charges.

Salvini and his right-wing League party are seeking to end Conte's populist coalition with a no-confidence vote soon. One of the party's key issues is immigration. He is pushing for an early Italian election that he hopes will see him win the premiership.

The Italian court ruling overturned the ban on entering territorial waters but didn't rule on Salvini's ban against charity boats' docking in Italy. Salvini announced on Thursday that he would challenge the ruling in a higher tribunal.

In Brussels, European Commission spokeswoman Vanessa Mock said the EU's executive stands ready to provide support once the people aboard are disembarked and an official request has been made for help.

"The situation where persons are stranded at sea for days and weeks on end is untenable," Mock told reporters Friday. "Once again, we are reminded that predictable and sustainable solutions are urgently needed in the Mediterranean to ensure that people can disembark quickly and safely and receive the care they need."

U.N. workers and migrants have described horrific conditions in crowded detention centers in Libya, where migrants are routinely beaten, starved, raped or forced to work as slaves.

The International Organization for Migration says over 39,280 migrants have reached Europe this year from North Africa across the Mediterranean with at least 840 others dying on the journey -- numbers that are significantly lower than in previous years.

Information for this article was contributed by Lorne Cook of The Associated Press.

A Section on 08/17/2019

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