Migrant Arrivals by Sea on Italian Island Swell Past 2,100

Several hundred more migrants reached a tiny Italian island before dawn on Monday, swelling to past 2,100 the number of arrivals in some 24 hours.
Italian
state radio said four boats arrived at Lampedusa island after being escorted
the last miles to port early Monday by Italian coast guard or custom police
vessels. The 635 latest arrivals followed more than 1,400 who arrived on Sunday.
Human
traffickers often take advantage of calm seas to launch unseaworthy boats
toward European shores, The Associated Press reported.
The
radio said many people slept on mattresses outdoors after Lampedusa’s migrant
housing center, which had been empty until Sunday, had filled up. Hundreds more
were being transferred to an unused passenger ferry offshore for quarantine
until they can be tested for COVID-19.
Sunday's
steady stream of migrant boats arriving at the 20-square-kilometer (about
8-square mile) island, which is closer to northern Africa than to the Italian
mainland, was the biggest number of migrants to come ashore in a single day at
an Italian port this year.
Il
Giornale di Sicilia, a Sicilian daily, said just before midnight a boat
dispatched by the port captain's office aided a fishing boat with 352 migrants
aboard, some 9 nautical miles (16 kilometers) from the island.
A
few hours later, another coast guard motorboat took aboard 87 men in a boat
farther out at sea, while successive hours saw more boats and their passengers
reach the island, the newspaper said. Among them were at least 13 women and
eight children, the daily said.
On
Sunday, the island's mayor appealed to the Italian government to deal with the
sea migrant issue, and national political leaders chimed in, too.
In
recent years there have been similar surges in springtime in the number of
migrant arrivals. Several years ago, a few thousand migrants rescued at sea
arrived in one day, as more than 100,000 people in some years were plucked to
safety from unseaworthy boats, by military vessels, charity ships or cargo
vessels.
Italy has insisted, mainly unsuccessfully, that fellow European Union nations take in many of the migrants. Many are fleeing poverty in their African or Asian homelands and are eventually denied asylum.