Cloaked
by darkness and guarded by police, they huddle together at the port:
the latest migrants to reach Lampedusa, out of the shadows and into
Europe.
More
than 2,000 have reached the southern Italian island since Saturday,
raising fears that the warmer weather could bring a new rush to Europe's
shores.
Around
the new arrivals, fragments of aluminium thermal blankets flutter in
the air, buffeted by the winds they faced on their crossing from Libya.
Almost
13,000 have landed in Italy so far this year; three times more than the
same period in 2020. And more than 500 have died - a four-year high.
The
Italian government has called for solidarity from its EU partners, with
the interior minister urging "structural changes" to migrant management
within the bloc.
For now, it's falling on deaf ears; Austria has already ruled out accepting any of the recent arrivals from Lampedusa.
The
uptick has once again filled the island's migrant camp, which was
designed to hold fewer than 300. It now has five times that number, with
dozens more held outside on the dusty road.
Most are barefoot, using whatever they can find to take shelter from the sun. Police stop us from talking to them
But through the fence of the camp, Hidaya Ahmed from Nigeria was keen to talk.
"I
want to work, I want to feed my family, they are dying," says Hidaya.
"I lost about four sisters, all because of hunger. Then we came to Libya
and they put us in prison for three months. They treated us like slaves
- sometimes they gave us money, sometimes nothing."
She
tells me she paid smugglers 8,000 Libyan dinars (£1,300; $1,800) for
the three-day boat crossing to Lampedusa. Italian intelligence
reportedly estimate that 50-70,000 people may be on Libya's shores
waiting to take a similar journey.
Another
woman, Shantleen from Cameroon, says she did not intend to leave Libya,
where she had a restaurant, but robbers came to her home, stole
everything she had and raped her. She breaks down in tears as she shows
her hand, which she says was injured in the attack.
"I'm
sorry," she says, "I don't want to talk about what happened in Libya. I
don't know where I want to go to, I just need help. Wherever they want
to keep me is fine. What I need is help."
Does she believe Europe will want her, I ask, given that she arrived through illegal passage.
"Let them say that I came in an illegal way," she replies "but if they ask me and hear my story, they will understand my pain."
Most
of the migrants here arrive from countries that don't qualify for
asylum. Those whose claims are rejected are in theory deported, but it's
not clear how many are really being sent back.
'It's time to say enough'
Lampedusa
and its population of around 6,000 have shown immense resilience and,
for the most part, hospitality over years of migratory pressure. At the
height of the EU's migrant crisis in 2015, some 20,000 landed on its
shores.
But,
for some, patience has run out. In the European elections two years
ago, the far-right, anti-immigrant League party of Matteo Salvini
garnered almost half the votes on the island. It is part of the new
national unity government, which is being strained by the recent
arrivals
As
a tug boat brings in another group of migrants picked up nearby,
Atillio Lucia, a representative of the League, stands at the port
shouting abuse and expletives.
"It's
time to say enough after 30 years," he tells me later. "I want the
migrant camp to be closed immediately and a naval blockade so they can't
access the island.
The
European Union adopted what it called a "migration pact" last autumn,
which included plans for more assistance to countries of origin in
return for better policing of their borders.
Some
here are calling for a financial package for Libya to stop the boats,
in the style of the EU's €3bn deal with Turkey in 2016, which massively
reduced crossings to Greece.
Until
a solution can be found to halt the traffickers, this tiny, rocky
island will wait to see whether the recent arrivals are just a temporary
spike - or whether a hot summer awaits on the horizon.
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