AFP/Rome

UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon, Italian Prime Minister Matteo Renzi and EU foreign policy chief Federica Mogherini met on a ship off Italy yesterday in a show of “solidarity” after a series of migrant boat tragedies.
The event comes just over a week after more than 750 people drowned in the Mediterranean’s worst migrant shipwreck.
Photos posted on Twitter showed the three boarding the Italian naval ship San Giusto off the coast of Sicily late yesterday afternoon.
A UN Twitter account also posted images showing Ban, Mogherini and Renzi talking as they made their way to the vessel.
The leaders aim to “assess the situation and help ensure European solidarity for the efforts undertaken to save the lives of migrants crossing the Mediterranean Sea”, the EU said in a statement on Saturday.
The visit is part of a string of meetings that Mogherini has planned, citing “the need for a common effort to address the issue of migration, from tackling root causes to facing the emergencies”.
The trip takes place eight days after a shipwreck off the Libyan coast killed over 750 people fleeing war and poverty as they tried, like thousands more, to reach Europe.
Last Sunday’s disaster came after two other migrant shipwrecks left up to 450 people dead.
Yesterday an Italian navy ship reached the southern port of Taranto with 274 migrants on board after they were rescued at sea.
Under pressure to deal with a spike in the number of migrants undertaking the perilous journey to Europe, EU leaders held emergency talks on Thursday and decided to triple funding for the bloc’s maritime surveillance operation.
Brussels also wants United Nations approval for an EU military operation against the people smugglers who organise the hazardous crossings, often aboard overcrowded boats.
Britain and France are set to demand a UN Security Council resolution to take action in Libyan territorial waters.
Mogherini said on Sunday that it would not be easy for the EU to secure a UN mandate, or the approval of the Libyan authorities, which have not yet formed a unity government.
A staunch proponent for military action against smugglers, Renzi has branded them “the slave traders of the 21st century”.
Yesterday Nato chief Jens Stoltenberg said the crisis required a “comprehensive response”.
However, Ban has urged the EU to refrain from resorting to force, saying there could be “no military solution” to the tragedies in the Mediterranean.
“What is crucial is to have a global approach that takes into account the roots of the problem, the security and human rights of migrants and refugees, such as having immigration channels that are legal and regular,” Ban said in an interview with Italy’s La Stampa daily.
Rights groups have repeatedly warned that migrants are aware of the deadly risks involved in travelling across the Mediterranean on rickety boats, but that their desperation to flee war and poverty pushes them to make the journey anyway.
Mogherini will travel to the UN headquarters in New York today and meet with US Secretary of State John Kerry in Washington tomorrow.
Aid groups predict that if the migrant crisis continues unabated, there could be 30,000 deaths at sea this year and Italy will have to process 200,000 migrants landing in flimsy boats on its soil.
Already, more than 1,750 migrants have died in shipwrecks this year – 30 times more than the same period in 2014.
Italy’s shelters have become home to 80,000 people.
Interior Minister Angelino Alfano has called for talks with the country’s local officials in Rome on May 7, to find ways to tackle the crisis.
The UN rights chief Zeid Ra’ad al-Hussein last week condemned “callous” EU migration policies, which he said are turning the Mediterranean into a “vast cemetery”.

Nato calls for ‘comprehensive response” to migrant crisis

The plight of migrants in the Mediterranean requires a “comprehensive response”, Nato’s head Jens Stoltenberg said yesterday, adding that the alliance would help by trying to stabilise countries in the region.
“We have to be united to tackle this crisis,” he said during a visit to Lisbon.
His comments came a week after a shipwreck off the Libyan coast left more than 750 people dead.
Nato’s role in stabilising countries like Afghanistan was part of the broader approach to the refugee problem in the Mediterranean, Stoltenberg said. “This is not only about northern Africa. We know the people trying to cross the sea come from as far as Asia, Afghanistan or the Middle East.”
Last week, EU leaders agreed to triple funding for the bloc’s maritime search-and-rescue operation as part of a plan to deal with the spike in migrants undertaking the perilous Mediterranean journey to Europe.
The EU is also considering possible military action.
Stoltenberg welcomed the EU’s decision to increase its presence at sea, adding that human trafficking was the “main problem”.
More than 1,750 migrants have died in shipwrecks this year – 30 times more than the same period in 2014.
Many of these people are smuggled in on boats from Libya, which has long been a transit country for African migrants.
The flow has intensified since the toppling of dictator Muammar Gadhafi in 2011, as militias turn to the lucrative business of human trafficking.
People fleeing violence in the Middle East, especially in Syria, are also using Libya as a transit country.
“We are ready to co-operate with Libya as soon as the security situation allows,” Stoltenberg said after a meeting with Portuguese Foreign Minister Rui Machete.

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