Italy sinking: Bad weather hampers search for migrants

Bad weather delays Italy boat search

Footage shows fire service divers reaching the wreckage, at a depth of 47 metres
Rough seas force Italian rescuers to postpone their search for hundreds of migrants still missing after the boat sank off Lampedusa.
  • Underwater footage Watch 
  • Europe's migrant dilemma 
  • Survivors pulled from water Watch
  • Day of tears Watch
  • In pictures: The day after
  • Harding: Risks for migrants
  • 'Two weeks on migrant boat'
  • Hewitt: A European tragedy 

    Footage from Italy's fire service shows divers reaching the wreckage, at a depth of 47 metres

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    Rough seas have forced divers to postpone their search for more than 200 migrants still unaccounted for after their boat sank off southern Italy.
    Rescuers have so far found 111 bodies, and 155 people have been pulled alive from the seas 1km (half a mile) from the island of Lampedusa.
    Dramatic video footage shows the boat lying upright on the seabed some 150ft (45m) below the surface.
    Divers have described seeing horrific scenes inside the wreckage.

    The arguments have begun over how to stop this tragic loss of life.
    An estimated 25,000 have lost their lives in the past 20 years.
    Some officials are saying that if you close borders then you give more power to the traffickers. Others point out that there are 26 million out of work in the EU and that Europe is reluctant to accommodate more migrants.
    UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon said on Thursday that there needed to be "more channels for safe and orderly migration". It might help but it remains likely that thousands will still try and migrate to Europe.
    EU Home Affairs Commissioner Cecilia Malmstroem vowed to "fight smugglers exploiting human despair".
    None of this is easy but officials are saying that the migrants have become a "European tragedy".
    Corpses are crammed into the wreck and some of the bodies - even in death - seeming to cling to the sides of the hull, the BBC's Alan Johnston reports.
    So many bodies have been brought ashore that the island has had to send for more coffins and turn a hangar at the airport into a huge, makeshift mortuary.
    Italians are aghast at the scale of the tragedy, Italy's worst ever migrant shipwreck, our correspondent says.
    A day of mourning has been declared, with flags flying at half-mast and a minute of silence observed in all Italian schools.
    A special mass is being held on Friday evening in the church in Lampedusa.
    Pope Francis, visiting Assisi, described Friday as "a day of tears" for the victims and condemned a "savage world" that ignores the plight of "people who have to flee poverty and hunger".
    He has said he wants to use abandoned Catholic monasteries and convents to house refugees.
    Lampedusa Mayor Giusi Nicolini - who wept at the scene of so many bodies - said: "After these deaths, we are expecting something to change. Things cannot stay the same."
    "The future of Lampedusa is directly linked to policies on immigration and asylum," she told reporters.
    Map of migrants routes


    Illegal migration numbers

    • Since 1988, at least 19,142 people died trying to reach Europe's borders - 2,352 in 2011 alone
    • 6,707 have died off Sicily in the past 10 years
    • Of those who arrived in Italy in 2011, 571,000 continued on to Germany, 210,000 to France, 194,000 to the UK, 87,000 to Sweden, 75,000 to the Netherlands, and 58,000 stayed in Italy
    Source: Fortress Europe
    "This is not an Italian tragedy, this is a European tragedy," Interior Minister Angelino Alfano has said. "Lampedusa has to be considered the frontier of Europe, not the frontier of Italy."
    'Continuous horror' Italian coastguard ships, fishing boats and helicopters have been taking part in the rescue and recovery operation off an area of Lampedusa called Rabbit Island.
    The search has been widened beyond the initial radius of four nautical miles in an effort to recover bodies that have been swept away by tides.
    But the worsening weather conditions have put the operation on hold, the BBC's Gavin Hewitt reports from Lampedusa.
    Alan Johnston reports on Italy's 'day of tears'
    Mr Alfano said the divers had seen dozens of bodies in the wreck. "There could be even more in the hold, where the poorest of the poor are usually put," he told parliament.

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    Half of the bodies so far recovered are said to be women and four are children.
    The skipper of the boat, a 35-year-old Tunisian, was arrested, Mr Alfano announced on a visit to Lampedusa on Thursday. "He had been deported from Italy in April," he said.
    The 66ft (20m) ship was carrying around 500 migrants - mostly from Eritrea and Somalia - when it set sail from the Libyan port of Misrata, survivors said.
    The boat began taking on water when its motor stopped working as it neared Lampedusa early on Thursday morning, they said.
    Some of those on board then reportedly set fire to a piece of material to try to attract the attention of passing ships, only to have the fire spread to the rest of the boat.
    The boat is thought to have capsized when everyone moved to one side.
    Rescued migrants in image released by Italian coastguard on 3 October 2013 This image released by the Italian coastguard shows some of the migrants who survived the shipwreck.
    Image from video released by Italian coastguard of rescued migrants on 3 October 2013 Most of those who were making the crossing from Libya to Italy were from Eritrea and Somalia.
    Hearses at Lampedusa's airport on 4 October 2013 So many bodies have been recovered, a hangar at Lampedusa's airport has had to be turned into a temporary mortuary.
    Black ribbons tied to flags in Assisi during Pope's visit on 4 October 2013 Black ribbons in memory of those who died were tied to banners during a mass by Pope Francis in front of St Francis Basilica in Assisi.
    Footage from Lampedusa showed bodies being laid out on the dockside.
    Mayor Nicolini has described the scene as a "continuous horror", while a local doctor said the hardest part to deal with was seeing the bodies of children.

    Why people flee Eritrea and Somalia

    Eritrea:
    • UN says 3,000 people try to flee each month
    • Human rights groups say the country is becoming a giant jail, with some 10,000 political prisoners
    • Young people conscripted to army - sometimes until age of 40
    Somalia:
    • Much of the country controlled by al-Shabab Islamist militants
    • Country ravaged by two decades of war
    An Eritrean woman who had initially been placed among the bodies on the shore was later found to be breathing and was taken to hospital in Sicily.
    In a statement, UN High Commissioner for Refugees Antonio Guterres commended the swift action taken by the Italian coast guard to save lives.
    Mr Guterres also expressed "dismay at the rising global phenomenon of migrants and people fleeing conflict or persecution and perishing at sea".
    The UN said that in recent months most migrants attempting the crossing were fleeing the conflicts in Syria and the Horn of Africa, rather than coming from sub-Saharan Africa.
    The number of those arriving by sea to Italy this year until 30 September stood at 30,100, according to the UN.
    The main nationalities of those arriving were Syrian (7,500), Eritrean (7,500) and Somali (3,000).
    Map
    Have you or has anyone you know made this journey? Or have you taken other risks to get into Europe? Please get in touch using the form below.
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