Migrants stranded on 'Banksy boat' board quarantine ship off Italy

Over 350 migrants rescued in the Mediterranean last week have boarded a quarantine ship in order to undergo Covid-19 checks before being allowed into Palermo, Sicily
3 min read
03 September, 2020
The Sea-Watch 4 approaches the ferry to be used as a quarantine vessel [Getty]
More than 350 people, including those rescued by a vessel sponsored by British street artist Banksy, were transferred onto a quarantine vessel off Sicily on Wednesday, according to aid workers.

The 353 migrants on board Sea-Watch 4 included those rescued last week by the Louise Michel, a 30-metre boat sponsored by the mysterious artist.

"The first people have boarded the quarantine vessel and the operation is ongoing," Mattea Weihe, spokeswoman for the Sea-Watch humanitarian organisation said.

Many had been on board under severely cramped conditions for the past 12 days, Weihe added.

The migrants are due to land in Palermo, Sea Watch said, after quarantine checks.

Meanwhile at Palermo's Cervello hospital a migrant mother who tested positive for Covid-19 and her baby were undergoing treatment, Italian news agency ANSA said.

The woman went into labour at the crowded migrant holding centre on the southern island of Lampedusa on Tuesday and authorities decided it would be better to fly her to Palermo.

However, she gave birth as the helicopter neared the city of Agrigento, about 120 kilometres (75 miles) south of Palermo.

'The economy is crumbling'

Migrants and crew celebrate as they learn that they have permission to run
into the port of Palermo, Sicily [Getty]

The transfers come as the latest arrivals fuel anger from local officials in Lampedusa and Sicily over a rise in illegal landings.

Italy has seen in recent months the daily arrivals of hundreds of migrants from North Africa, a task complicated by security measures imposed under the coronavirus crisis.

Sicily's regional governor, the right-leaning Nello Musumeci, and Lampedusa Mayor Toto Martello met Italian Prime Minister Guiseppe Conte in Rome late Wednesday to discuss the issue.

The meeting came after an Italian court last week rejected a decree issued by Musumeci ordering the closure of migrant centres on the island to curb the spread of the coronavirus.

"Every day there is tension in Lampedusa, the economy is crumbling, the images is of an island at war," Martello told reporters after the discussions with Conte.

According to sources at the meeting, Conte promised two more boats, within 48 hours, to evacuate migrants from the island.

He also said that the payment of taxes by the island would be suspended. "The economic suffering, and not just that, deserves a strong response from the state," he said, according to the sources.

"We are aware of the difficulties you are living under and the need to study together the most effective solutions to these problems," the prime minister was quoted as saying.

From 1 August last year to 31 July this year, over 21,600 migrants arrived on Italy's shores - compared with nearly 8,700 landings the year before, official data shows.

Despite the sharp rise, migrant arrivals are still far below the numbers recorded in recent years, especially before Rome signed a deal with Libya for its coast guard to prevent migrant departures. 

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