Italy's Far-Right Government Leaves Hundreds Of Migrants Stranded At Sea

Italy’s new hard-line interior minister prevented a rescue ship carrying 629 migrants from docking on Italian shores, leaving them stranded at sea for a day before Spain accepted them.

The Aquarius, a rescue vessel operated by aid organizations Doctors Without Borders (also known as Médecins Sans Frontières) and SOS Mediterranée, was forced to wait in the Mediterranean Sea between Italy and Malta after failing to receive guidance from Italian authorities. Spain on Monday allowed the ship to dock in the city of Valencia, a rare move for a country that typically keeps its borders sealed.

The passengers had been rescued in six different operations, according to SOS Mediterranée. They included 123 unaccompanied minors, 11 other children and seven pregnant women.

“They are becoming more anxious & asking when they will be able to reach shore,” SOS Mediterranée tweeted Monday.

Matteo Salvini, Italy’s new interior minister, prevented the passengers from disembarking in his country on Sunday.

“Starting today Italy will begin to say NO to human trafficking, NO to the business of illegal immigration,” Salvini wrote in a Facebook post. Italy shouldn’t have to shoulder the burden by itself, he added, when other European countries aren’t doing their fair share.

A request to allow the migrants to disembark in Malta also went nowhere, according to Doctors Without Borders.

“By closing their ports, Italy and Malta have not only turned their backs on more than 600 desperate and vulnerable people but also on their obligations under international law,” Elisa De Pieri, Amnesty International’s Italy researcher, said in a statement.

“There is an urgent humanitarian imperative here,” added Vincent Cochetel, the United Nations refugee agency special envoy for the Central Mediterranean. “People are in distress, are running out of provisions and need help quickly. Broader issues such as who has responsibility and how these responsibilities can best be shared between States should be looked at later.”

The Aquarius is rapidly running out of fresh water and supplies, a member of the rescue team told HuffPost UK.

“It was very dark and we could only hear their screams until a helicopter arrived and lit up the scene,“ Alessandro Porro said of the rescue. “At the moment we are like an ambulance that has been stopped and we don’t know where to go.”

Salvini has accused migrants of rape, drug-dealing and spreading diseases, and has promised to send 500,000 back to their home countries. His party, The League, is known for nationalist, anti-Islam and anti-immigrant views.

In another Facebook post on Monday, Salvini assailed the Sea-Watch 3, another rescue ship operating in Mediterranean waters that had to wait hours to be assigned a disembarkation port over the weekend.

“We will not turn Italy into a huge refugee camp,” he wrote. “Italy has stopped bowing down, it’s now time to say no.”

Italy has long been a destination for migrants crossing the Mediterranean and has been dealing with a surge in arrivals in recent years. More than 600,000 migrants and refugees have disembarked on Italian shores in the last four years. Although the influx has been subsiding, the country continues struggling to cope with the arrivals.

This article has been updated with comment from Porro.

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TOPSHOT - Migrants try to pull a child out of the water as they wait to be rescued by members of Proactiva Open Arms NGO in the Mediterranean sea, some 12 nautical miles north of Libya, on October 4, 2016. At least 1,800 migrants were rescued off the Libyan coast, the Italian coastguard announced, adding that similar operations were underway around 15 other overloaded vessels. / AFP / ARIS MESSINIS        (Photo credit should read ARIS MESSINIS/AFP/Getty Images)
Migrants wait to be rescued by members of Proactiva Open Arms NGO as they drift in the Mediterranean Sea, some 12 nautical miles north of Libya, on October 4, 2016. At least 1,800 migrants were rescued off the Libyan coast, the Italian coastguard announced, adding that similar operations were underway around 15 other overloaded vessels. / AFP / ARIS MESSINIS        (Photo credit should read ARIS MESSINIS/AFP/Getty Images)
Migrants hang from a boat as they wait to be rescued as they drift in the Mediterranean Sea, some 12 nautical miles north of Libya, on October 4, 2016. At least 1,800 migrants were rescued off the Libyan coast, the Italian coastguard announced, adding that similar operations were underway around 15 other overloaded vessels. / AFP / ARIS MESSINIS        (Photo credit should read ARIS MESSINIS/AFP/Getty Images)
SICILIAN STRAIT, MEDITERRANEAN SEA - MAY 25: Migrants in an overcrowded boat, which was about to capsize, are rescued by Bettica and Bergamini ships of Italian Navy at Sicilian Strait, between Libya and Italy, in Mediterranean sea on May 25, 2016. The Italian Navy saved around 500 migrants as they found dead bodies of seven migrants in the sea during the operations. (Photo by Italian Navy / Marina Militare/Anadolu Agency/Getty Images)
SICILIAN STRAIT, MEDITERRANEAN SEA - MAY 25: Migrants in an overcrowded boat, which was about to capsize, are rescued by Bettica and Bergamini ships of Italian Navy at Sicilian Strait, between Libya and Italy, in Mediterranean sea on May 25, 2016. The Italian Navy saved around 500 migrants as they found dead bodies of seven migrants in the sea during the operations. (Photo by Italian Navy / Marina Militare/Anadolu Agency/Getty Images)
SICILIAN STRAIT, MEDITERRANEAN SEA - MAY 25: Migrants in a capsized boat are rescued by Bettica and Bergamini ships of Italian Navy at Sicilian Strait, between Libya and Italy, in Mediterranean sea on May 25, 2016. The Italian Navy saved around 500 migrants as they found dead bodies of seven migrants in the sea during the operations. (Photo by Italian Navy / Marina Militare/Anadolu Agency/Getty Images)
SICILIAN STRAIT, MEDITERRANEAN SEA - MAY 25: Migrants in a capsized boat are rescued by Bettica and Bergamini ships of Italian Navy at Sicilian Strait, between Libya and Italy, in Mediterranean sea on May 25, 2016. The Italian Navy saved around 500 migrants as they found dead bodies of seven migrants in the sea during the operations. (Photo by Italian Navy / Marina Militare/Anadolu Agency/Getty Images)
SICILIAN STRAIT, MEDITERRANEAN SEA - MAY 25: Italian marines rescue migrants from a capsized boat at Sicilian Strait, between Libya and Italy, in Mediterranean sea on May 25, 2016. The Italian Navy saved around 500 migrants as they found dead bodies of seven migrants in the sea during the operations. (Photo by Italian Navy / Marina Militare/Anadolu Agency/Getty Images)
SICILIAN STRAIT, MEDITERRANEAN SEA - MAY 25: A helicopter approaches to the capsized boat as Italian marines rescue migrants from an overcrowded boat at Sicilian Strait, between Libya and Italy, in Mediterranean sea on May 25, 2016. The Italian Navy saved around 500 migrants as they found dead bodies of seven migrants in the sea during the operations. (Photo by Italian Navy / Marina Militare/Anadolu Agency/Getty Images)
TO GO WITH AFP STORY BY ELLA IDE -  Coffins are ready for the autopsied body of migrants or refugees who died at sea on April 18, 2015, trying to cross the mediterranean to reach Europe, on November 5, 2015 at Marisicilia military Base in Melilli, Sicily. The military base hosts forensic medics of the Labanof Forensic Pathology laboratory, which specialises in identifying decomposed, burned or mutilated remains, who perform autopsies to make a database where DNA and other distinguishing features can be catalogued, allowing relatives in other EU countries or family members back home to find their dead. Since the first largescale wrecks off Lampedusa in 2013, Italy has been looking at ways to name those who had been fleeing war, poverty or persecution in places as far flung as Sub-Saharan Africa, Pakistan or Syria. AFP PHOTO / MARCELLO PATERNOSTRO        (Photo credit should read MARCELLO PATERNOSTRO/AFP/Getty Images)
A forensic medic of the Labanof Forensic Pathology laboratory prepares to perform autopsies on bodies of migrants believed to have drowned trying to cross the Mediterranean. The autopsies will be used to make a database cataloguing DNA and other distinguishing features. Nov. 5, 2015, Marisicilia military base in Melilli, Sicily. 
A forensic medic of the Labanof Forensic Pathology laboratory prepares to perform autopsies on bodies of migrants believed to have drowned trying to cross the Mediterranean. The autopsies will be used to make a database cataloguing DNA and other distinguishing features. Nov. 5, 2015, Marisicilia military base in Melilli, Sicily. 
In this photo taken on Monday, Sept. 19, 2016, Cristina Cattaneo puts victims' personal belongings inside labeled plastic bags in a lab in Milan, Italy. Cattaneo, a professor at the University of Milan, is leading a team of forensic pathologists who have volunteered to identify and catalogue roughly 800 migrants who lost their lives in one of the worst tragedies in the Mediterranean migrant crisis. Her work is a unique, historic project expanding the field of humanitarian legal medicine and also a multi-million euro effort on the part of the Italian government to shame Europe into paying attention to migrants lost at sea and help Italy face the inundation. (AP Photo/Antonio Calanni)
Mediterranean Island of Lampedusa between Sicily and Malta , Lampedusa Gate to Europe, monument in memory of migrants drowned in the attempt to reach Europe from North Africa . Every year, thousands of migrants and refugees from Africa pay smugglers to help them cross the Mediterranean sea and reach the island. (Photo by: Andia/UIG via Getty Images)
Lampedusa (italy), midnight between august 27h and 28th. Migrants rescued by the Italian Coast Guard disembark at the Favarolo peer. (Photo by Marco Panzetti/NurPhoto via Getty Images)
Lampedusa (italy), midnight between august 27h and 28th. Migrants rescued by the Italian Coast Guard disembark at the Favarolo peer. (Photo by Marco Panzetti/NurPhoto via Getty Images)
Dr Pietro Bartolo stands in front of a dilapidated migrant boat one of the many on show on a patch of shrubland in Lampedusa
Dr Pietro Bartolo stands in front of a dilapidated migrant boat one of the many on show on a patch of shrubland in Lampedusa
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A young migrant makes a walk outside the 'Temporary Permanence Centre' (CPT), a refugee camp on the Lampedusa island on February 19, 2015. Authorities on the Italian island of Lampedusa struggled to cope with a huge influx of newly-arrived migrants as aid organisations warned the Libya crisis means thousands more could be on their way. Officials on the tiny island south of Sicily were trying to process more than 1,200 exhausted, often traumatised and ill Africans in a reception centre designed for less than a third of that number.  AFP PHOTO / ALBERTO PIZZOLI        (Photo credit should read ALBERTO PIZZOLI/AFP/Getty Images)
Men and women refugees make a walk in the center of Lampedusa, on February 19, 2015. Authorities on the Italian island of Lampedusa struggled to cope with a huge influx of newly-arrived migrants as aid organisations warned the Libya crisis means thousands more could be on their way. Officials on the tiny island south of Sicily were trying to process more than 1,200 exhausted, often traumatised and ill Africans in a reception centre designed for less than a third of that number.  AFP PHOTO / ALBERTO PIZZOLI        (Photo credit should read ALBERTO PIZZOLI/AFP/Getty Images)
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MSIDA, MALTA - APRIL 23: Friends and families attend the funeral service for 24 drowned Mediterranean refugees on April 23, 2015 in Msida, Malta.   Up to 920 refugees died while trying to reach the Southern coasts of Italy, when the ship carrying them capsized in waters between the Italian island of Lampedusa and Libya.  PHOTOGRAPH BY James Galea / Barcroft Media (Photo credit should read James Galea / Barcroft Media via Getty Images)
Migrants make a walk outside the 'Temporary Permanence Centre' (CPT), a refugee camp on the Lampedusa island on February 19, 2015. Authorities on the Italian island of Lampedusa struggled to cope with a huge influx of newly-arrived migrants as aid organisations warned the Libya crisis means thousands more could be on their way. Officials on the tiny island south of Sicily were trying to process more than 1,200 exhausted, often traumatised and ill Africans in a reception centre designed for less than a third of that number.  AFP PHOTO / ALBERTO PIZZOLI        (Photo credit should read ALBERTO PIZZOLI/AFP/Getty Images)
Dr Pietro Bartolo sits in the childrens playroom at the hospital in Lampedusa which has been set up especially for migrant and refugee children
Dr Pietro Bartolo sits in the childrens playroom at the hospital in Lampedusa which has been set up especially for migrant and refugee children
A migrant stands behind a fence of the 'Temporary Permanence Centre' (CPT), a refugee camp on February 17, 2015 in Lampedusa. The Italian coastguard launched a massive operation Sunday to rescue more than 2,000 migrants in difficulty between the Italian island of Lampedusa and the Libyan coast, local media said.  The emergency rescue came on the same day Italy said it was evacuating staff from its embassy in Libya and suspending operations there, highlighting the worsening security situation in the violence-plagued country.            AFP PHOTO / ALBERTO PIZZOLI        (Photo credit should read ALBERTO PIZZOLI/AFP/Getty Images)
BERLIN, GERMANY - APRIL 08:  A refugee from Niger stands by near huts that were being torn down at a temporary, city-tolerated refugee camp at Oranienplatz in Kreuzberg district on April 8, 2014 in Berlin, Germany. Refugees, many of them from Africa who came to Germany via Lampedusa, began dismantling their shelters today after many of them agreed to a deal with city authorities to move to a renovated hostel. Not all of the several hundred refugees, some of whom have been living at the Oranienplatz camp almost a year, have agreed to the deal, and while some said they will go elsewhere, some insist they will stay, despite a city order to vacate.  (Photo by Sean Gallup/Getty Images)
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