Italy on Friday said it was not facing an “invasion” after a spike in refugee boat crossings from Libya exacerbated fears the nation is on the verge of becoming the main entry point for people trying to reach Europe.
Nearly 6,000 mostly African migrants have landed at southern Italian ports since Tuesday, but Italian Prime Minister Matteo Renzi said the overall trend this year is broadly in line with lastyear’s pattern.
“We are not facing an invasion,” Renzi told a news conference after the figures were released by the International Organization for Migration (IOM) in Geneva.
Photo: Reuters
Fears are running high in Italy that it could pay the price of EU moves to close routes through the Greek islands and the Balkans.
Italian officials are also wary of a possibility of neighboring EU nations closing their borders, as France did temporarily last year and Austria is threatening to do.
Austria has begun preparing for a possible reintroduction of border controls at the Brenner pass in the Alps, prompting protests from Italy and the European Commission.
Renzi warned of repercussions if Vienna does close the border.
“If the rules are broken, we cannot act as if nothing has happened,” he said.
The Italian Ministry of the Interior this week asked local authorities to find 15,000 extra beds to house asylum seekers in anticipation of a possible increase in the numbers of people requiring accommodation.
“There is a problem that concerns our country, but there is not an invasion underway,” Renzi said. “We have taken certain initiatives, but we are not facing an invasion. It is a big problem, but we have clear ideas about how to deal with it.”
Renzi said the EU is working on deals with African nations to stem the flow of migrants leaving for Europe and to prevent those who do from being allowed to pass through transit nations.
“I do not want to play it down, but I do want to send a reassuring message. The numbers of boats are barely a few higher compared to last year,” he said.
The IOM said that of the 6,021 migrants who have reached Europe by sea since Tuesday, only 174 had landed in Greece, with the balance coming ashore in Italy.
IOM spokesman Joel Millman said there was no evidence yet to suggest the Italy arrivals were linked to an EU-Turkey deal aimed at stemming the influx of people to the Greek islands.
German Chancellor Angela Merkel and top EU officials are to visit an area near the Turkish-Syrian border next week to follow up on the EU-Turkey migrant deal, officials said on Friday.
The EU sealed a deal with Ankara last month under which Turkey takes back all “irregular migrants” who arrive in the Greek islands in exchange for billions of euros in aid for refugees and political concessions.
Migrants who spoke to IOM staff in Italy all said they had crossed from Libya, most of them on rubber dinghies loaded with about 130 people.
“Many of them were from sub-Saharan Africa, and we have noticed an increase in numbers from the Horn of Africa, particularly Eritreans,” Federico Soda, head of the IOM’s Rome office, said in a statement. “There have been very few Syrians leaving from Libya in recent months.”
Italian officials say that any Syrians seeking to get into Europe via Libya are more likely to come via Albania, from where it is just a short crossing to the southeastern coast of Italy.
So far this year, more than 23,000 migrants have landed in Italy, compared with nearly 153,500 who have landed in Greece, the IOM said.
Italy’s Interior Ministry put arrivals in Italy at 23,739 since the start of the year as of Thursday morning, compared with 19,589 by April 14 last year.
That represents a rise of 21 percent, but officials urged caution in interpreting figures as the pattern of the last two years has been for migrants to arrive in bursts often dictated by weather and sea conditions.
There are an estimated 1 million non-Libyan nationals living and working in Libya.
This has led to speculation that a deterioration in the security situation in the nation could result in many of them seeking to reach Italy.
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