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Italy tows in migrant ghost ship, recovers fire tragedy ferry

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Italian sailors took control Friday of a merchant ship that had been abandoned by its crew and left to power towards the country's jagged coast with 450 migrants aboard.

While sailors boarded the Ezadeen and set up a tow some 40 kilometres (25 miles) off southern Italy, another crew brought the burned-out ferry Norman Atlantic into the Italian port of Brindisi, six days after a fire killed 13 passengers and forced the rescue of 477.

Italian prosecutors fear that the ferry could contain the bodies of still undiscovered illegal immigrants and unregistered passengers, potentially raising the death toll far higher.

In the Ezadeen drama, six coastguard officers were lowered from a helicopter onto the deck of the Sierra Leone-registered merchant ship as it approached Crotone, off the heel of Italy, the navy said.

Once under control, the Italian coastguard began towing the 73-metre-long (240-foot-long) livestock vessel towards the Italian port of Corigliano Calabro, where it was expected to arrive late Friday or early Saturday, the navy said.

The ship had been en route from Famagusta in northern Turkish-controlled Cyprus to the southern French port of Sete, according to a shipping website.

Crewless migrant ships intercepted off Italian coast
Crewless migrant ships intercepted off Italian coast
, AFP

The same site also noted, however, that the Ezadeen had begun its voyage in October from the Syrian port of Tartus. Thousands of refugees who made it to Italy this year fled war-torn Syria, though most came via North Africa.

Before it came to a halt, the nearly 50-year-old Ezadeen had been moving at a brisk seven knots, and was spotted by a coastguard plane 80 miles offshore shortly after nightfall.

A woman refugee on board was able to operate the ship's radio and told the coastguard that the crew had jumped ship, Italian navy spokesman Captain Filippo Marini said.

"We are alone, there is no one, help us!" the woman cried, he said.

The coastguard asked for assistance from Icelandic patrol boat Tyr, which was in the area on a mission with Frontex, the European Union's border agency.

The Tyr was able to draw alongside the ship, but its speed and rough weather conditions made boarding impossible.

Once the Ezadeen had run out of fuel, five Tyr crew members were winched on to the merchant ship by helicopter to care for passengers until Italian coastguard officers arrived to take control.

"The migrants aboard were visibly distressed but overall in good medical condition. They have been provided with food, water and basic medical assistance," a Forex statement said Friday.

- Series of dramas -

The incident marked the third in a series of dramas Italy has dealt with in several days.

Immigrants wait early on Decembre 31  2014 aboard the Moldovan-flagged ship Blue Sky M. in the port ...
Immigrants wait early on Decembre 31, 2014 aboard the Moldovan-flagged ship Blue Sky M. in the port of Gallipoli, in southeastern of Italy
Nunzio Giove, AFP/File

The first came with the deadly fire that broke out on the Norman Atlantic ferry Sunday between Greece and Italy.

Bari prosecutor Giuseppe Volpe said almost 500 people may have been aboard -- far above the 474 officially on the manifest, and prompting fears the current death toll of 13 may rise once the ferry is fully searched in Brindisi.

Volpe said it had been "established" that illegal immigrants were aboard, something confirmed by several of the rescued passengers. The search is expected to concentrate on trucks parked in the car deck where the fire started.

Italy, which is struggling with a record wave of migrants making the dangerous journey across the Mediterranean, faced yet more drama Wednesday after the navy stopped a first crewless "ghost" ship with hundreds of migrants on board.

In that case, the Blue Sky M freighter carried nearly 770 migrants drifting towards the rocks off Italy's southeastern shore. The ship was on autopilot, after having been abandoned by the people smugglers who had sailed in from Turkey via Greek waters.

The Moldovan-registered Blue Sky M got to within five miles -- or 45 minutes sailing time -- of running aground before six navy officers were lowered on to the ship by helicopter, and succeeded in bringing it under control.

The vessel's passengers included some 60 children and two pregnant women, one of whom gave birth on board as the boat neared catastrophe, according to the Italian Red Cross.

Many of the migrants on the ship were treated for hypothermia or injuries including broken limbs.

More than 170,000 people have been rescued at sea by Italy in the last 14 months, and hundreds, possibly thousands, have perished trying to make the crossing.

The migrants are almost invariably under the control of ruthless traffickers who earn thousands of dollars for every person they put to sea from Libya and other departure points in North Africa.

Increasingly, the traffickers appear to be abandoning their boats -- and human cargoes -- once at sea for Europe, with more now using bigger vessels than the converted fishing boats and other craft they previously favoured.

The International Organisation for Migration estimated Friday in Geneva that people smugglers grossed over $1 million on just one of the two abandoned ships rescued off Italy alone.

Italian sailors took control Friday of a merchant ship that had been abandoned by its crew and left to power towards the country’s jagged coast with 450 migrants aboard.

While sailors boarded the Ezadeen and set up a tow some 40 kilometres (25 miles) off southern Italy, another crew brought the burned-out ferry Norman Atlantic into the Italian port of Brindisi, six days after a fire killed 13 passengers and forced the rescue of 477.

Italian prosecutors fear that the ferry could contain the bodies of still undiscovered illegal immigrants and unregistered passengers, potentially raising the death toll far higher.

In the Ezadeen drama, six coastguard officers were lowered from a helicopter onto the deck of the Sierra Leone-registered merchant ship as it approached Crotone, off the heel of Italy, the navy said.

Once under control, the Italian coastguard began towing the 73-metre-long (240-foot-long) livestock vessel towards the Italian port of Corigliano Calabro, where it was expected to arrive late Friday or early Saturday, the navy said.

The ship had been en route from Famagusta in northern Turkish-controlled Cyprus to the southern French port of Sete, according to a shipping website.

Crewless migrant ships intercepted off Italian coast

Crewless migrant ships intercepted off Italian coast
, AFP

The same site also noted, however, that the Ezadeen had begun its voyage in October from the Syrian port of Tartus. Thousands of refugees who made it to Italy this year fled war-torn Syria, though most came via North Africa.

Before it came to a halt, the nearly 50-year-old Ezadeen had been moving at a brisk seven knots, and was spotted by a coastguard plane 80 miles offshore shortly after nightfall.

A woman refugee on board was able to operate the ship’s radio and told the coastguard that the crew had jumped ship, Italian navy spokesman Captain Filippo Marini said.

“We are alone, there is no one, help us!” the woman cried, he said.

The coastguard asked for assistance from Icelandic patrol boat Tyr, which was in the area on a mission with Frontex, the European Union’s border agency.

The Tyr was able to draw alongside the ship, but its speed and rough weather conditions made boarding impossible.

Once the Ezadeen had run out of fuel, five Tyr crew members were winched on to the merchant ship by helicopter to care for passengers until Italian coastguard officers arrived to take control.

“The migrants aboard were visibly distressed but overall in good medical condition. They have been provided with food, water and basic medical assistance,” a Forex statement said Friday.

– Series of dramas –

The incident marked the third in a series of dramas Italy has dealt with in several days.

Immigrants wait early on Decembre 31  2014 aboard the Moldovan-flagged ship Blue Sky M. in the port ...

Immigrants wait early on Decembre 31, 2014 aboard the Moldovan-flagged ship Blue Sky M. in the port of Gallipoli, in southeastern of Italy
Nunzio Giove, AFP/File

The first came with the deadly fire that broke out on the Norman Atlantic ferry Sunday between Greece and Italy.

Bari prosecutor Giuseppe Volpe said almost 500 people may have been aboard — far above the 474 officially on the manifest, and prompting fears the current death toll of 13 may rise once the ferry is fully searched in Brindisi.

Volpe said it had been “established” that illegal immigrants were aboard, something confirmed by several of the rescued passengers. The search is expected to concentrate on trucks parked in the car deck where the fire started.

Italy, which is struggling with a record wave of migrants making the dangerous journey across the Mediterranean, faced yet more drama Wednesday after the navy stopped a first crewless “ghost” ship with hundreds of migrants on board.

In that case, the Blue Sky M freighter carried nearly 770 migrants drifting towards the rocks off Italy’s southeastern shore. The ship was on autopilot, after having been abandoned by the people smugglers who had sailed in from Turkey via Greek waters.

The Moldovan-registered Blue Sky M got to within five miles — or 45 minutes sailing time — of running aground before six navy officers were lowered on to the ship by helicopter, and succeeded in bringing it under control.

The vessel’s passengers included some 60 children and two pregnant women, one of whom gave birth on board as the boat neared catastrophe, according to the Italian Red Cross.

Many of the migrants on the ship were treated for hypothermia or injuries including broken limbs.

More than 170,000 people have been rescued at sea by Italy in the last 14 months, and hundreds, possibly thousands, have perished trying to make the crossing.

The migrants are almost invariably under the control of ruthless traffickers who earn thousands of dollars for every person they put to sea from Libya and other departure points in North Africa.

Increasingly, the traffickers appear to be abandoning their boats — and human cargoes — once at sea for Europe, with more now using bigger vessels than the converted fishing boats and other craft they previously favoured.

The International Organisation for Migration estimated Friday in Geneva that people smugglers grossed over $1 million on just one of the two abandoned ships rescued off Italy alone.

AFP
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With 2,400 staff representing 100 different nationalities, AFP covers the world as a leading global news agency. AFP provides fast, comprehensive and verified coverage of the issues affecting our daily lives.

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