Italian police said Thursday they
had arrested a group of African migrants after witnesses said they threw 12
passengers overboard following a row about religion on a
boat headed to Europe.
The deadly dispute, which saw a
group of Muslim passengers allegedly attack a group of Christian passengers,
coincided with reports of a new migrant drowning tragedy.
Four days after a migrant shipwreck
off the coast of Libya, in which 400 people are believed to have died, another
41 migrants were missing feared drowned Thursday after their dinghy sank en
route to Italy, Italian media reported.
The stricken vessel was spotted by a
plane, which alerted the Italian coastguard but by the time a navy ship arrived
at the spot only four passengers were found alive, the reports quoted the
police and aid agencies as saying.
The four survivors, who came from
Nigeria, Ghana and Niger, said they were part of a group of 45 people that set
sail from Libya.
A separate group of migrants rescued
by an Italian vessel related a deadly standoff over religion in their dinghy,
which ended in 12 Nigerian and Ghanaian passengers being drowned, the police
said.
The victims were “of Christian
faith, compared to their attackers who were of Muslim faith,” police in the
Sicilian port of Palermo said in a statement.
Fifteen migrants were arrested on
suspicion of “multiple aggravated murder motivated by religious hate”, the
statement added.
The incident aboard the vessel, which
was carrying about 100 migrants, took place in the Strait of Sicily, between
Tunisia and Italy.
According to a group of Nigerian and
Ghanaian survivors, a fight broke out over religion, with a group of Muslim
passengers threatening the Nigerians and Ghanaians after they declared
themselves to be Christians.
“The threats then materialised and
12 people, all Nigerian and Ghanaian, are believed to have drowned in the
Mediterranean,” the police statement added.
The remaining passengers were
rescued and brought to Palermo, where the 15 alleged attackers, who came from
Ivory Coast, Mali and Senegal, were arrested.
– ‘Human chain’ –
The boat, like many of the claptrap
vessels flooding Italy’s shores each week with migrants fleeing conflict and
poverty in Africa and the Middle East, had set out from Libya on Tuesday,
according to the survivors.
The police said the distraught
Nigerians and Ghanaians told a “dreadful” story of their struggle to escape
with their lives “by forcefully resisting attempts to drown them, forming a
veritable human chain in some cases.”
Some passengers had taken
photographs of the incident, judicial sources who described the accounts as
“coherent” told Italian media.
The International Organization for
Migration said it had received reports of “a fight between different groups -–
maybe for religious reasons… on one of the boats rescued some days ago.”
Italy pleaded for more help from
other European Union countries Thursday to rescue the migrants risking their
lives to reach Europe and to share the burden of accommodating the arrivals.
Italy is not the final destination
of most of the tens of thousands of migrants who risk their lives each year in
search of a better life in Europe but as their first port of call it is saddled
with handling all their asylum requests as well as saving those in danger from
a watery grave.
“Ninety percent of the cost of the
patrol and sea rescue operations are falling on our shoulders, and we have not
had an adequate response from the EU,” Foreign Minister Paolo Gentiloni told
the daily Corriere della Sera.
“And then there is the difficult
issue of knowing where to send those rescued at sea — to the nearest port? To
the country where their boat came from? The EU has to respond clearly to these
questions,” Gentiloni said.
Photo:
In this image released by the US
Navy, migrants are gathered on the deck of a Malta Armed Forced ship as they
depart the amphibious transport dock ship USS San Antonio on October 17, 2013.
The San Antonio rescued 128 men adrift from an inflatable raft that was
threatening to capsize in rough seas in the Mediterraneanan on October 16 after
responding to a call by the Maltese Government. “AFP PHOTO
12 Nigerian, Ghanaian Christian migrants ‘thrown’ overboard by Muslim
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Friday, April 17, 2015
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