Current:Home > MySailboats packed with migrants seek Italy on lesser-known migration route -Blueprint Wealth Network
Sailboats packed with migrants seek Italy on lesser-known migration route
View
Date:2025-04-18 06:40:42
ROCCELLA JONICA, Italy (AP) — When the Taliban took Kabul in August, Zakia was six months pregnant and in her first year of university while her husband, Hamid, was working as an auditor. They decided to flee, and along with five relatives, began a two-month odyssey that took them through Iran and Turkey.
When it was time to cross the Mediterranean, they did so on an expensive sailboat that came ashore this month on a beach in the southern Italian region of Calabria.
They were dehydrated, but relieved to have survived a lesser-known migration route to Europe that is increasingly being used by wealthier Afghans, Iraqis, Iranians and Kurds. Entire families are paying top price for passage from Turkey aboard new or nearly new sailboats that can more easily avoid detection by authorities. Investigators say they are captained by smugglers, often Ukrainians, who may be in cahoots with Turkish mobsters and Italian 'ndrangheta clans on shore.
While aid workers call these "1st class" crossings, there is nothing elite about them. Hamid and Zakia were packed with 100 people below deck for a week as food supplies dwindled. After two days without fresh water, Zakia couldn't feel the baby moving inside her anymore.
"It was the worst experience of my life," Hamid said in an Italian gym as he and his wife waited to be processed for COVID-19 quarantine locations after their sailboat, "Passion Dalaware," came ashore Nov. 10.
For years, most political, humanitarian and media attention has focused on the hundreds of thousands of migrants, most of them Africans, who cross the central Mediterranean aboard unseaworthy vessels launched by smugglers from Libya and Tunisia.
The Calabrian route, which brings the migrants from Turkey to the "toe" of boot-shaped Italy rather than Sicily and its islands further south, has seen a nearly four-fold increase in arrivals in 2021 and now accounts for 16% of the sea arrivals in Italy this year.
The U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees is monitoring the situation closely, though the increase in Calabrian arrivals is mirrored by a similarly sharp increase in migrants arriving in Sicilian ports. Overall, sea arrivals in Italy this year are up to 59,000 compared with 32,000 at this point last year. The Calabrian route has seen 9,687 arrivals as of Nov. 14, compared with 2,507 last year.
"We are seeing Afghans. We are seeing Iraqis. We are seeing Iranians, Kurds," said Chiara Cardoletti, the UNHCR representative in Italy. Whereas single men used to account for most migrants, "right now on all the routes what you are seeing is an increase in the number of families arriving with lots of children. And that is true also for the route to Calabria."
The Calabrian route is just one of the myriad ways that would-be refugees from the Middle East, Southeast Asia and Africa try to reach Europe, a steady crisis that has fueled anti-immigrant sentiment on the continent and strained European Union solidarity.
Hamid and Zakia had a fraught odyssey that cost far more than most: After escaping Kabul with Hamid's sister, her husband and their three children, the family arrived in Turkey and paid 8,500 euros ($9,600) for each adult and 4,000 euros ($4,500) for each child to get to Calabria. Hamid's parents in Sweden helped finance the trip.
Hamid's 29-year-old sister, Tooba, who speaks good English, said the family decided to risk their lives on the journey because life in Afghanistan under Taliban rule was no longer safe, especially given her work as a lawyer.
"I cannot live in Kabul, and because of them I must leave Afghanistan," Tooba said, as she cradled a sleeping child.
Like Hamid and Zakia, she asked that her last name not be used for safety reasons.
Hamid said the smugglers provided enough water for the first four or five days, but that after it ran out, the passengers drank seawater with sugar for the final two days.
When the sailboat approached shore, the passengers came up on deck only to see the two smugglers who had captained the ship, both wearing ski masks, fleeing the scene in a black boat.
"The traffickers, who obviously have no concept of human scruples, are now even squashing 100 people in each sailboat," said Vittorio Zito, the mayor of Roccella Jonica, a small town on the Calabrian coast that has been a prime destination for smugglers.
The sailboats are difficult to intercept since even to aerial patrols, they look like normal pleasure boats. The "Passion Dalaware" was even flying a plastic American flag from its sail.
Zito said smugglers can make about 500,000 euros ($565,000) per trip on a stolen sailboat that costs around 100,000 euros ($113,000). Red Cross officials counted 101 people on Hamid's boat, whose smugglers stood to pocket 858,500 euros ($969,000).
There have been so many of these deserted sailboats recently that their carcasses line the Calabrian coast. Others are piled up in a boat cemetery near the port in Roccella Jonica.
The route is also being used by smugglers bringing fishing boats from Libya. On Nov. 14, 550 migrants arrived in Roccella Jonica, the highest number in one day. The migrants, including at least 100 Egyptian minors, were rescued from two fishing boats off the coast that had departed from Tobruk, a town in Libya near the Egyptian border.
Italian police have arrested several Ukrainian smugglers who have been sentenced for aiding and abetting illegal migration, but they are just small cogs in the wheel of a larger criminal operation.
"We have to go beyond the individual boats and arrests of smugglers to understand the reason behind the exponential increase," said Giovanni Bombardieri, chief prosecutor in the Calabrian capital of Reggio Calabria, who is leading the migration investigation.
"It is clear that our work requires an evaluation of the possible involvement of clans of the 'ndrangheta," the Calabrian-based organized crime syndicate, he told the AP.
Hamid and Zakia's odyssey isn't over. The extended family has been put in different locations in Calabria to complete two weeks of virus quarantine. After that they can begin the process of requesting asylum or can try to reach relatives in Sweden.
There is also some good news.
"I am very happy," said Zakia. "The Italian doctors checked and my baby is OK."
veryGood! (5)
Related
- Costco membership growth 'robust,' even amid fee increase: What to know about earnings release
- Man charged in 20-plus calls of false threats in US, Canada pleads guilty
- Finns go to the polls Sunday to elect a new president at a time of increased tension with Russia
- Britain’s post-Brexit trade talks with Canada break down as they disagree over beef and cheese
- Travis Hunter, the 2
- We don't know if Taylor Swift will appear in Super Bowl ads, but here are 13 of her best
- Teen Mom's Kailyn Lowry Shares First Photo of Her Twins
- Alaska Airlines returns the 737 Max 9 to service with Seattle to San Diego flight
- Off the Grid: Sally breaks down USA TODAY's daily crossword puzzle, Triathlon
- Person taken hostage in southern Germany, but rescued unharmed
Ranking
- All That You Wanted to Know About She’s All That
- Airstrikes in central Gaza kill 15 overnight while fighting intensifies in the enclave’s south
- Lenny Kravitz to Receive the Music Icon Award at 2024 People's Choice Awards
- 'Whirlwind' change from Jets to Ravens, NFL playoffs for Dalvin Cook: 'Night and day'
- New Zealand official reverses visa refusal for US conservative influencer Candace Owens
- King Charles III 'doing well' after scheduled prostate treatment, Queen Camilla says
- Trump must pay $83.3 million for defaming E. Jean Carroll, jury says
- Tattoo artist Kat Von D didn’t violate photographer’s copyright of Miles Davis portrait, jury says
Recommendation
Federal court filings allege official committed perjury in lawsuit tied to Louisiana grain terminal
Nicole Kidman couldn't shake off her 'Expats' character: 'It became a part of who I was'
King Charles admitted to London hospital for prostate treatment, palace says
Jurgen Klopp announces he will step down as Liverpool manager at end of season
Why members of two of EPA's influential science advisory committees were let go
NYPD raids, shuts down 6 alleged brothels posing as massage parlors, Mayor Adams says
Georgia Senate passes a panel with subpoena power to investigate District Attorney Fani Willis
An Alaska judge will preside over an upcoming Hawaii bribery trial after an unexpected recusal