Showing posts with label lampedusa. Show all posts
Showing posts with label lampedusa. Show all posts

AFM releases photo of migrants' dinghy


DI-VE - News Details

75 migrants die at sea - Malta-based Frontex plane sights bodies

timesofmalta.com - Updated: 75 migrants die at sea - Malta-based Frontex plane sights bodies

Lampedusa, another dramatic case of immigrants being driven back to where they came from

Lampedusa, another dramatic case of immigrants being driven back to where they came from

Lampedusa, July 29th, 2009.
After the 89 refugees sent back to Libya on Wednesday July 1st, 2009 and the 47 people sent back to Ghaddafi’s “concentration camps” on July 5th; yesterday, July 29th, 14 more immigrants - including two women and a child - were picked out of the sea in the Strait of Sicily and deported back to the port they had set out from.

The motor trawler that singled them out 35 miles south of Lampedusa, asked the Italian naval authorities for advice on how to behave. The answer was: drive them back. Following this new violation of the Geneva Convention, EveryOne Group has written an urgent letter to the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees.

LAMPEDUSA MIGRANT CENTRES MAY CLOSE: MARONI

LAMPEDUSA MIGRANT CENTRES MAY CLOSE: MARONI

(ANSA) - Palermo, July 29 - Migrant centres on the
Sicilian island of Lampedusa may be closed down at the end of
the year thanks to a new government immigration policy,
Interior Minister Roberto Maroni said Wednesday.
There are currently two migrant facilities on the
island, where landings have dropped significantly since Italy
began a controversial `push-back` policy in May.
Under the policy, migrants are intercepted in the
Mediterranean and immediately returned to Libya, the main
stepping-off point on the North African coast.
``We`ll make a decision at the end of the year,`` Maroni
said.

``Things are going extremely well in terms of landings,
the accord with Libya is working well and if things continue
to go on like this all summer we could think about a
different use for the structures,`` he said.
Since the policy came into effect more than 900 people
have been sent back to Libya as part of an accord between the
two countries.
Under the accord, asylum seekers can present their
claims from there.
The push-back policy has been heavily criticised by the
centre-left opposition in Italy, the Catholic Church,
humanitarian organisations and the United Nations, who say
Libya does not have a system in place to adequately deal with
asylum claims.

According to figures released by the Italian interior
ministry earlier this year, around 37,000 people landed on
Italian coasts in 2008 - a 75% increase on 2007.
This is over half the total number of migrants who
arrived in Europe by sea last year, which totalled around
67,000.

Armed Forces of Malta coordinates immigrants rescue to Lampedusa

timesofmalta.com - AFM coordinates rescue to Lampedusa

Fourteen illegal immigrants were rescued by the Italian authorities while drifting some 34 nautical miles south-south-east of Lampedusa because they did not have fuel to continue their journey.

The immigrants - 13 men and a woman, were in good health and were taken to Lampedusa. Their nationalities are not yet known.

The operation was coordinated by the Armed Forces of Malta, which is the search-and-rescue authority for the area. Its Italian counterpart at the Ministry of Transport in Rome alerted the Luqa Barracks' operations centre to the immigrants' plight.

UNHCR demands explanation from Italy over refugee abuse claims

UNHCR demands explanation from Italy over refugee abuse claims

he UNHCR (UN High Commissioner for Refugees) in Geneva has asked the Italian government for an explanation of how refugees who are returned to Libya are handled, following an incident that took place 1 July in the Mediterranean, about 30 km from the island of Lampedusa.

The Italian Navy intercepted a group of 82 people, 76 of them Eritreans, who were heading to Italy from Libya. The Italian ship transferred them to a Libyan ship, and they were returned to Libya and placed in detention. The UNHCR says that given the seriousness of allegations of mistreatment by Italian personnel during the transfer, Italy is being asked to respect international norms.

The UNHCR was able to visit and interview the group and says “it is clear that a significant number from this group are in need of international protection.” They told the UNHCR that personal effects, including vital documents, were seized by the Italian Navy during the operation and have not yet been returned to them and that although they were in a state of distress after four days at sea the Italian Navy did not offer them any food during the 12-hour operation to return them to Libya.

459 deaths 1ST 6 months 2009


ANSAmed

(ANSAmed) - ROME - ''The massacre continues: 459 deaths in the first six months of 2009.'' This is the most recent figure from Fortress Europe, the online observatory on the victims of immigration. There is however some hope: ''the figure is falling for the first time in three years. In the first few months of 2008, there was a total of 985 victims.'' A report by Gabriele Del Grande published on the observatory's website claims that most migrants die in the Sahara: ''a route they are forced to take, which is more dangerous than the sea crossing''. According to a census carried out through international press, at least 1,691 people have died in the desert since 1996. On her journey in the footsteps of the migrants, Del Grande stopped at Agadez in Nigeria, the crossroads for all African migrants who want to reach Algeria or Libya across the Sahara. The final destination is either Spain or Italy, despite the policies of expulsion or immediate return undertaken by the two countries. Amongst the many resources available on the Fortress Europe website is a video by a Senegalese journalist, which was filmed on June 16 at Barajas airport in Madrid. It reports on violence perpetrated on a fellow countryman: ''feet and hands bound like an animal,'' a note on the website explains, ''whilst a plain-clothed policeman holds him to the ground, underneath an airplane bound for Dakar.'' An investigation into forced returns from Lampedusa that began some weeks ago reports that ''the passengers onboard the boat refused entry off the coast of Lampedusa on July 1 were Eritreans. Eritrean refugees who now risk being repatriated. Or else they risk long-term detention in Libyan prisons, where they are already under arrest.'' Fortress Europe also notes that Italy knows the dangers facing Eritreans who are sent back. ''Italy is well aware of the fate that awaits Eritreans. So much so that last year the authorities granted permits to stay to most of the 2,739 Eritreans who landed on the Sicilian coast.''(ANSAmed).

BNR • Child victims of trafficking increase in EU

BNR • Child victims of trafficking increase in EU:

"The European Union Agency for Fundamental Rights (FRA) released a report alarming that every year EU children fall prey to trafficking for sexual and labour exploitation, adoption and donor extraction. Trafficking affects the entire EU, but insufficient data obscures the true magnitude of the problem. According to the report, in January-November 2008, 131 children in Romania and 51 in Bulgaria fell victim to trafficking. In Italy, 400 out of 1320 minors in immigration camps on the island of Lampedusa have disappeared. In recent years some 50 children in Irish social care centers have disappeared as well. The Agency calls for more effective legislation to combat child trafficking, as well as for better protection and support of child victims."