Italy's Far-Right Government Leaves Hundreds Of Migrants Stranded At Sea

A rescue ship carrying 629 people finally docked in Spain.
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Italy’s new hard-line interior minister prevented a rescue ship carrying 629 migrants from docking on Italian shores, leaving them stranded at sea for a day before Spain accepted them.

The Aquarius, a rescue vessel operated by aid organizations Doctors Without Borders (also known as Médecins Sans Frontières) and SOS Mediterranée, was forced to wait in the Mediterranean Sea between Italy and Malta after failing to receive guidance from Italian authorities. Spain on Monday allowed the ship to dock in the city of Valencia, a rare move for a country that typically keeps its borders sealed.

The passengers had been rescued in six different operations, according to SOS Mediterranée. They included 123 unaccompanied minors, 11 other children and seven pregnant women.

“They are becoming more anxious & asking when they will be able to reach shore,” SOS Mediterranée tweeted Monday.

Matteo Salvini, Italy’s new interior minister, prevented the passengers from disembarking in his country on Sunday.

“Starting today Italy will begin to say NO to human trafficking, NO to the business of illegal immigration,” Salvini wrote in a Facebook post. Italy shouldn’t have to shoulder the burden by itself, he added, when other European countries aren’t doing their fair share.

A request to allow the migrants to disembark in Malta also went nowhere, according to Doctors Without Borders.

“By closing their ports, Italy and Malta have not only turned their backs on more than 600 desperate and vulnerable people but also on their obligations under international law,” Elisa De Pieri, Amnesty International’s Italy researcher, said in a statement.

“There is an urgent humanitarian imperative here,” added Vincent Cochetel, the United Nations refugee agency special envoy for the Central Mediterranean. “People are in distress, are running out of provisions and need help quickly. Broader issues such as who has responsibility and how these responsibilities can best be shared between States should be looked at later.”

The Aquarius is rapidly running out of fresh water and supplies, a member of the rescue team told HuffPost UK.

“It was very dark and we could only hear their screams until a helicopter arrived and lit up the scene,“ Alessandro Porro said of the rescue. “At the moment we are like an ambulance that has been stopped and we don’t know where to go.”

Salvini has accused migrants of rape, drug-dealing and spreading diseases, and has promised to send 500,000 back to their home countries. His party, The League, is known for nationalist, anti-Islam and anti-immigrant views

In another Facebook post on Monday, Salvini assailed the Sea-Watch 3, another rescue ship operating in Mediterranean waters that had to wait hours to be assigned a disembarkation port over the weekend. 

“We will not turn Italy into a huge refugee camp,” he wrote. “Italy has stopped bowing down, it’s now time to say no.”

Italy has long been a destination for migrants crossing the Mediterranean and has been dealing with a surge in arrivals in recent years. More than 600,000 migrants and refugees have disembarked on Italian shores in the last four years. Although the influx has been subsiding, the country continues struggling to cope with the arrivals. 

This article has been updated with comment from Porro. 

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Migrant crisis in the Mediterranean
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TOPSHOT - Migrants try to pull a child out of the water as they wait to be rescued by members of Proactiva Open Arms NGO in the Mediterranean sea, some 12 nautical miles north of Libya, on October 4, 2016.At least 1,800 migrants were rescued off the Libyan coast, the Italian coastguard announced, adding that similar operations were underway around 15 other overloaded vessels. / AFP / ARIS MESSINIS (Photo credit should read ARIS MESSINIS/AFP/Getty Images) (credit:ARIS MESSINIS via Getty Images)
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Migrants wait to be rescued by members of Proactiva Open Arms NGO as they drift in the Mediterranean Sea, some 12 nautical miles north of Libya, on October 4, 2016.At least 1,800 migrants were rescued off the Libyan coast, the Italian coastguard announced, adding that similar operations were underway around 15 other overloaded vessels. / AFP / ARIS MESSINIS (Photo credit should read ARIS MESSINIS/AFP/Getty Images) (credit:ARIS MESSINIS via Getty Images)
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Migrants hang from a boat as they wait to be rescued as they drift in the Mediterranean Sea, some 12 nautical miles north of Libya, on October 4, 2016.At least 1,800 migrants were rescued off the Libyan coast, the Italian coastguard announced, adding that similar operations were underway around 15 other overloaded vessels. / AFP / ARIS MESSINIS (Photo credit should read ARIS MESSINIS/AFP/Getty Images) (credit:ARIS MESSINIS via Getty Images)
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SICILIAN STRAIT, MEDITERRANEAN SEA - MAY 25: Migrants in an overcrowded boat, which was about to capsize, are rescued by Bettica and Bergamini ships of Italian Navy at Sicilian Strait, between Libya and Italy, in Mediterranean sea on May 25, 2016. The Italian Navy saved around 500 migrants as they found dead bodies of seven migrants in the sea during the operations. (Photo by Italian Navy / Marina Militare/Anadolu Agency/Getty Images) (credit:Anadolu Agency via Getty Images)
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SICILIAN STRAIT, MEDITERRANEAN SEA - MAY 25: Migrants in an overcrowded boat, which was about to capsize, are rescued by Bettica and Bergamini ships of Italian Navy at Sicilian Strait, between Libya and Italy, in Mediterranean sea on May 25, 2016. The Italian Navy saved around 500 migrants as they found dead bodies of seven migrants in the sea during the operations. (Photo by Italian Navy / Marina Militare/Anadolu Agency/Getty Images) (credit:Anadolu Agency via Getty Images)
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SICILIAN STRAIT, MEDITERRANEAN SEA - MAY 25: Migrants in a capsized boat are rescued by Bettica and Bergamini ships of Italian Navy at Sicilian Strait, between Libya and Italy, in Mediterranean sea on May 25, 2016. The Italian Navy saved around 500 migrants as they found dead bodies of seven migrants in the sea during the operations. (Photo by Italian Navy / Marina Militare/Anadolu Agency/Getty Images) (credit:Anadolu Agency via Getty Images)
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SICILIAN STRAIT, MEDITERRANEAN SEA - MAY 25: Migrants in a capsized boat are rescued by Bettica and Bergamini ships of Italian Navy at Sicilian Strait, between Libya and Italy, in Mediterranean sea on May 25, 2016. The Italian Navy saved around 500 migrants as they found dead bodies of seven migrants in the sea during the operations. (Photo by Italian Navy / Marina Militare/Anadolu Agency/Getty Images) (credit:Anadolu Agency via Getty Images)
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SICILIAN STRAIT, MEDITERRANEAN SEA - MAY 25: Italian marines rescue migrants from a capsized boat at Sicilian Strait, between Libya and Italy, in Mediterranean sea on May 25, 2016. The Italian Navy saved around 500 migrants as they found dead bodies of seven migrants in the sea during the operations. (Photo by Italian Navy / Marina Militare/Anadolu Agency/Getty Images) (credit:Anadolu Agency via Getty Images)
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SICILIAN STRAIT, MEDITERRANEAN SEA - MAY 25: A helicopter approaches to the capsized boat as Italian marines rescue migrants from an overcrowded boat at Sicilian Strait, between Libya and Italy, in Mediterranean sea on May 25, 2016. The Italian Navy saved around 500 migrants as they found dead bodies of seven migrants in the sea during the operations. (Photo by Italian Navy / Marina Militare/Anadolu Agency/Getty Images) (credit:Anadolu Agency via Getty Images)
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TO GO WITH AFP STORY BY ELLA IDE - Coffins are ready for the autopsied body of migrants or refugees who died at sea on April 18, 2015, trying to cross the mediterranean to reach Europe, on November 5, 2015 at Marisicilia military Base in Melilli, Sicily. The military base hosts forensic medics of the Labanof Forensic Pathology laboratory, which specialises in identifying decomposed, burned or mutilated remains, who perform autopsies to make a database where DNA and other distinguishing features can be catalogued, allowing relatives in other EU countries or family members back home to find their dead. Since the first largescale wrecks off Lampedusa in 2013, Italy has been looking at ways to name those who had been fleeing war, poverty or persecution in places as far flung as Sub-Saharan Africa, Pakistan or Syria. AFP PHOTO / MARCELLO PATERNOSTRO (Photo credit should read MARCELLO PATERNOSTRO/AFP/Getty Images) (credit:MARCELLO PATERNOSTRO via Getty Images)
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A forensic medic of the Labanof Forensic Pathology laboratory prepares to perform autopsies on bodies of migrants believed to have drowned trying to cross the Mediterranean. The autopsies will be used to make a database cataloguing DNA and other distinguishing features. Nov. 5, 2015, Marisicilia military base in Melilli, Sicily. (credit:MARCELLO PATERNOSTRO via Getty Images)
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In this photo taken on Monday, Sept. 19, 2016, Cristina Cattaneo puts victims' personal belongings inside labeled plastic bags in a lab in Milan, Italy. Cattaneo, a professor at the University of Milan, is leading a team of forensic pathologists who have volunteered to identify and catalogue roughly 800 migrants who lost their lives in one of the worst tragedies in the Mediterranean migrant crisis. Her work is a unique, historic project expanding the field of humanitarian legal medicine and also a multi-million euro effort on the part of the Italian government to shame Europe into paying attention to migrants lost at sea and help Italy face the inundation. (AP Photo/Antonio Calanni) (credit:Antonio Calanni/AP)
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Migrants wait to disembark from an Italian Coast Guard ship after being rescued in Porto Empedocle, Sicily, southern Italy, Saturday, Feb. 14, 2015. The U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees, Save the Children, Amnesty International and other aid groups blasted the new EU-backed rescue patrol as insufficient for the task at hand. The European Union took over Mediterranean patrols after Italy phased out its robust Mare Nostrum operation in November. Mare Nostrum (Our Seas) had been launched in 2013 after 360 migrants drowned off the coast of the Sicilian island of Lampedusa. But the EU's Triton mission only operates a few miles off Europe's coast â its job is to patrol Europe's borders â whereas Mare Nostrum patrols took Italian rescue ships up close to Libya's coast. (AP Photo/Francesco Malavolta) (credit:ASSOCIATED PRESS)
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Mediterranean Island of Lampedusa between Sicily and Malta , Lampedusa Gate to Europe, monument in memory of migrants drowned in the attempt to reach Europe from North Africa . Every year, thousands of migrants and refugees from Africa pay smugglers to help them cross the Mediterranean sea and reach the island. (Photo by: Andia/UIG via Getty Images) (credit:Andia via Getty Images)
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Lampedusa (italy), midnight between august 27h and 28th. Migrants rescued by the Italian Coast Guard disembark at the Favarolo peer. (Photo by Marco Panzetti/NurPhoto via Getty Images) (credit:NurPhoto via Getty Images)
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Rescued migrants line up after disembarking from the Italian Coast Guard ship 'Fiorillo' in the harbor of of Lampedusa, Southern Italy, Wednesday, April 22, 2015. Italy pressed the European Union on Wednesday to devise concrete, robust steps to stop the deadly tide of migrants on smugglers' boats in the Mediterranean, including setting up refugee camps in countries bordering Libya. Italian Defense Minister Roberta Pinotti also said human traffickers must be targeted with military intervention. (AP Photo/Mauro Buccarello) (credit:ASSOCIATED PRESS)
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Dr Pietro Bartolo stands in front of a dilapidated migrant boat one of the many on show on a patch of shrubland in Lampedusa (credit:Angela GiuffridaThe WorldPost)
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TARANTO, ITALY - OCTOBER 20: Spanish ship ''Rio Segura'' carrying the 633 refugees rescued by Frontex's Operation Triton which was carried out between Italian island of Lampedusa and Libya, and the dead bodies of 8 refugees, arrive in Taranto port, Italy on October 20, 2015. (Photo by Alvaro Padilla Bengoa/Anadolu Agency/Getty Images) (credit:Anadolu Agency via Getty Images)
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A long line of hearses carry to a waiting boat the coffins of the 29 migrants who died from hypothermia during the voyage that began over the weekend in Libya, where most smuggling operations originate, to Europe, is loaded onto a car to be transported to a ferry boat and then to Sicily, in Lampedusa, Italy, Wednesday, Feb. 11, 2015. Some 300 migrants who tried to cross the frigid Mediterranean in open, rubber boats, were reported missing Wednesday by survivors as the U.N. refugee agency and other aid groups sharply criticized the new EU rescue operation as insufficient and costing lives. (AP Photo/Mauro Buccarello) (credit:ASSOCIATED PRESS)
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LAMPEDUSA, ITALY - SEPTEMBER 12: Inside a former migrant detention center on September 12, 2014 in Lampedusa, Italy. Personal messages and graffiti by detainees marked some of the walls of the structure. This camp was closed in 2007 after a new, more secure site, was built on the island. At the height of the migrant influx on Lampedusa in 2011 some 30,000 plus took refuge on the island before being ferried to the Italian mainland. This figure represents over ten times the Island's usual population of around 3,000.(Photo by Giles Clarke/Getty Images) (credit:Giles Clarke via Getty Images)
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A young migrant makes a walk outside the 'Temporary Permanence Centre' (CPT), a refugee camp on the Lampedusa island on February 19, 2015. Authorities on the Italian island of Lampedusa struggled to cope with a huge influx of newly-arrived migrants as aid organisations warned the Libya crisis means thousands more could be on their way. Officials on the tiny island south of Sicily were trying to process more than 1,200 exhausted, often traumatised and ill Africans in a reception centre designed for less than a third of that number. AFP PHOTO / ALBERTO PIZZOLI (Photo credit should read ALBERTO PIZZOLI/AFP/Getty Images) (credit:ALBERTO PIZZOLI via Getty Images)
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Men and women refugees make a walk in the center of Lampedusa, on February 19, 2015. Authorities on the Italian island of Lampedusa struggled to cope with a huge influx of newly-arrived migrants as aid organisations warned the Libya crisis means thousands more could be on their way. Officials on the tiny island south of Sicily were trying to process more than 1,200 exhausted, often traumatised and ill Africans in a reception centre designed for less than a third of that number. AFP PHOTO / ALBERTO PIZZOLI (Photo credit should read ALBERTO PIZZOLI/AFP/Getty Images) (credit:ALBERTO PIZZOLI via Getty Images)
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LAMPEDUSA, ITALY - SEPTEMBER 8: A migrant ship graveyard on September 8, 2014 in Lampedusa, Italy. In the early days of mass migration from North Africa, Italian authorities would tow the ships full of migrants into the port, where they dumped into this boatyard. Nowadays, Italian authorities are ordered to destroy the migrant boats at sea after having transferred the migrants onto coast guard boats. Many of the boats are bought by human trafficking gangs for the sole purpose of transporting migrants over the Mediterranean Sea. They're often steered by inexperienced and poorly trained crew members.(Photo by Giles Clarke/Getty Images) (credit:Giles Clarke via Getty Images)
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MSIDA, MALTA - APRIL 23: Friends and families attend the funeral service for 24 drowned Mediterranean refugees on April 23, 2015 in Msida, Malta. Up to 920 refugees died while trying to reach the Southern coasts of Italy, when the ship carrying them capsized in waters between the Italian island of Lampedusa and Libya.PHOTOGRAPH BY James Galea / Barcroft Media (Photo credit should read James Galea / Barcroft Media via Getty Images) (credit:Barcroft Media via Getty Images)
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MSIDA, MALTA - APRIL 23: Friends and families attend the funeral service for 24 drowned Mediterranean refugees on April 23, 2015 in Msida, Malta. Up to 920 refugees died while trying to reach the Southern coasts of Italy, when the ship carrying them capsized in waters between the Italian island of Lampedusa and Libya.PHOTOGRAPH BY James Galea / Barcroft Media (Photo credit should read James Galea / Barcroft Media via Getty Images) (credit:Barcroft Media via Getty Images)
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Pope Francis waves to faithful aboard an Italian Coast Guard boat upon his arrival at the island of Lampedusa, southern Italy, Monday, July 8, 2013. Pope Francis heads Monday to the Sicilian island of Lampedusa for his first pastoral visit outside Rome, going to the farthest reaches of Italy to pray with migrants who have recently arrived and remember those who have died trying. Francis, a pope from "the end of the Earth" whose ancestors immigrated to Argentina from Italy, has a special place in his heart for refugees: As archbishop of Buenos Aires, he denounced the exploitation of migrants as "slavery" and said those who did nothing to stop it were complicit by their silence. On Monday, he will arrive at Lampedusa's port by boat and will throw a floral wreath into the sea in memory of those who died trying to reach the island, which is closer to Africa than the Italian mainland. (AP Photo/Gregorio Borgia) (credit:ASSOCIATED PRESS)
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Migrants make a walk outside the 'Temporary Permanence Centre' (CPT), a refugee camp on the Lampedusa island on February 19, 2015. Authorities on the Italian island of Lampedusa struggled to cope with a huge influx of newly-arrived migrants as aid organisations warned the Libya crisis means thousands more could be on their way. Officials on the tiny island south of Sicily were trying to process more than 1,200 exhausted, often traumatised and ill Africans in a reception centre designed for less than a third of that number. AFP PHOTO / ALBERTO PIZZOLI (Photo credit should read ALBERTO PIZZOLI/AFP/Getty Images) (credit:ALBERTO PIZZOLI via Getty Images)
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Migrants prepare to board a ferry boat from the port of Lampedusa, for Sicily, southern Italy, where they will be sent to other temporary camps based on their legal status, Monday, Oct. 7, 2013. Lampedusa is Italy's southernmost point and a frequent destination for migrants trying to reach a safe haven. Tens of thousands arrive there each year seeking refugee status in Europe. On Thursday a fishing boat packed with 500 African migrants capsized off the shores of the island of Lampedusa, causing at least 190 dead and more than 100 missing, in what could become the largest death toll in a migrant shipwreck in the Mediterranean on record. (AP Photo/Luca Bruno) (credit:ASSOCIATED PRESS)
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Dr Pietro Bartolo sits in the childrens playroom at the hospital in Lampedusa which has been set up especially for migrant and refugee children (credit:Angela GiuffridaThe WorldPost)
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A migrant stands behind a fence of the 'Temporary Permanence Centre' (CPT), a refugee camp on February 17, 2015 in Lampedusa. The Italian coastguard launched a massive operation Sunday to rescue more than 2,000 migrants in difficulty between the Italian island of Lampedusa and the Libyan coast, local media said. The emergency rescue came on the same day Italy said it was evacuating staff from its embassy in Libya and suspending operations there, highlighting the worsening security situation in the violence-plagued country. AFP PHOTO / ALBERTO PIZZOLI (Photo credit should read ALBERTO PIZZOLI/AFP/Getty Images) (credit:ALBERTO PIZZOLI via Getty Images)
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Migrants arrive on the tiny island of Lampedusa, Italy, Wednesday, March 23, 2011. An Italian ship has arrived at the island of Lampedusa to transfer hundreds of illegal migrants to centers elsewhere in Italy. The number of illegal arrivals from northern Africa on Lampedusa has risen to more than 5,000, equaling the local population and raising fears of a sanitation crisis. Officials say that around 500 migrants were in the process of boarding the Italian navy ship San Marco Wednesday afternoon for transfer to Sicily. (AP Photo) (credit:ASSOCIATED PRESS)
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Illegal migrants are taken to the Italian navy ship San Marco, seen in the background, to be transferred to centers elsewhere in Italy from the island of Lampedusa, southern Italy, Wednesday, March 23, 2011. An Italian ship has arrived at the island of Lampedusa to transfer hundreds of illegal migrants fleeing North Africa to centers elsewhere in Italy. Some 5,000 people from North Africa are currently staying on this remote Italian island in the Mediterranean, equaling the local population and raising fears of a sanitation crisis. (AP Photo/Str) (credit:ASSOCIATED PRESS)
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BERLIN, GERMANY - APRIL 08: A refugee from Niger stands by near huts that were being torn down at a temporary, city-tolerated refugee camp at Oranienplatz in Kreuzberg district on April 8, 2014 in Berlin, Germany. Refugees, many of them from Africa who came to Germany via Lampedusa, began dismantling their shelters today after many of them agreed to a deal with city authorities to move to a renovated hostel. Not all of the several hundred refugees, some of whom have been living at the Oranienplatz camp almost a year, have agreed to the deal, and while some said they will go elsewhere, some insist they will stay, despite a city order to vacate. (Photo by Sean Gallup/Getty Images) (credit:Sean Gallup via Getty Images)
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The coffins with the bodies of immigrants who died trying to reach the Italian coast arrive from Lampedusa on February 11, 2015 in Porto Empedocle where they will be buried in cemeteries of the area. More than 300 migrants are feared drowned after their overcrowded dinghies sank in the Mediterranean, triggering calls for the world to act after the latest boat disaster in a perilous crossing from Africa to Europe. The victims were mainly from sub-Saharan Africa who had left the coast of conflict-wracked Libya at the weekend in four small inflatable boats, the UN refugee agency said. AFP PHOTO / MARCELLO PATERNOSTRO (Photo credit should read MARCELLO PATERNOSTRO/AFP/Getty Images) (credit:MARCELLO PATERNOSTRO via Getty Images)
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Lampedusa (italy), midnight between august 27h and 28th. Migrants rescued by the Italian Coast Guard disembark at the Favarolo peer. (Photo by Marco Panzetti/NurPhoto via Getty Images) (credit:NurPhoto via Getty Images)
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TO GO WITH AFP STORY BY ELLA IDE - Men move a coffin destined to the autopsied body of a migrant or a refugee who died at sea trying to cross the mediterranean to reach Europe, on November 5, 2015 at Marisicilia military Base in Melilli, Sicily. The military base hosts forensic medics of the Labanof Forensic Pathology laboratory, which specialises in identifying decomposed, burned or mutilated remains, who perform autopsies to make a database where DNA and other distinguishing features can be catalogued, allowing relatives in other EU countries or family members back home to find their dead. Since the first largescale wrecks off Lampedusa in 2013, Italy has been looking at ways to name those who had been fleeing war, poverty or persecution in places as far flung as Sub-Saharan Africa, Pakistan or Syria. AFP PHOTO / MARCELLO PATERNOSTRO (Photo credit should read MARCELLO PATERNOSTRO/AFP/Getty Images) (credit:MARCELLO PATERNOSTRO via Getty Images)
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TO GO WITH AFP STORY BY ELLA IDE - Men move a coffin destined to the autopsied body of a migrant or a refugee who died at sea trying to cross the mediterranean to reach Europe, on November 5, 2015 at Marisicilia military Base in Melilli, Sicily. The military base hosts forensic medics of the Labanof Forensic Pathology laboratory, which specialises in identifying decomposed, burned or mutilated remains, who perform autopsies to make a database where DNA and other distinguishing features can be catalogued, allowing relatives in other EU countries or family members back home to find their dead. Since the first largescale wrecks off Lampedusa in 2013, Italy has been looking at ways to name those who had been fleeing war, poverty or persecution in places as far flung as Sub-Saharan Africa, Pakistan or Syria. AFP PHOTO / MARCELLO PATERNOSTRO (Photo credit should read MARCELLO PATERNOSTRO/AFP/Getty Images) (credit:MARCELLO PATERNOSTRO via Getty Images)
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Italian Coast Guardsmen carry a North African illegal immigrant into the hospital for treatment after a revolt broke out in the refugee camp near the military airport in Lampedusa, an island off the southern coast of Italy, early Thursday morning, July 30, 1998. Some of the approximately 150 illegal African immigrants protesting against their repatriation, set fire to their lodgings. The revolt lasted about 2 hours with 10 policemen hurt, 20 immigrants arrested and another 20 were treated for smoke inhalation. Under the European Union's open borders policy, Italy is obliged to send home illegal immigrants, many of whom were headed to northern Europe in search of jobs. (AP Photo/Alessandro Fucarini) (credit:ASSOCIATED PRESS)
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BERLIN, GERMANY - APRIL 08: Riot police confront protesters at the former temporary refugee camp at Oranienplatz in Kreuzberg district on April 8, 2014 in Berlin, Germany. Several hundred riot police sealed off the square after, according to an eyewitness, violence broke out between refugees who had accepted a deal by the city to leave the camp and a small number who insisted on staying. Refugees, many of them from Africa who came to Germany via Lampedusa, began dismantling their shelters today after many of them agreed to a deal with city authorities to move to a renovated hostel. Not all of the several hundred refugees, some of whom have been living at the Oranienplatz camp almost a year, have agreed to the deal, and while some said they will go elsewhere, some insisted they will stay, despite a city order to vacate. (Photo by Sean Gallup/Getty Images) (credit:Sean Gallup via Getty Images)
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Giuseppe Giardina, a worker of the Lampedusa's cemetery shows unidentified tombs of immigrants inside on October 7, 2013. Most of the people who die trying to reach the island are buried in this cemetry with just a number on a cross as the vast majority of the corpses cannot be identified and their families do not know they are buried there. AFP PHOTO / ROBERTO SALOMONE (Photo credit should read ROBERTO SALOMONE/AFP/Getty Images) (credit:ROBERTO SALOMONE via Getty Images)
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A general view shows a burnt building at the Temporary Permanance Centre (CPT), refugee camp, on the italian island of Lampedusa on October 6, 2013. The fire was set on September 20, 2011 by Tunisian migrants protesting against their immediate repatriation. AFP PHOTO / ROBERTO SALOMONE (Photo credit should read ROBERTO SALOMONE/AFP/Getty Images) (credit:ROBERTO SALOMONE via Getty Images)
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A general view shows the Lampedusa harbour on October 6, 2013. Divers in Italy resumed the grim search for bodies today after a shipwreck on October 3 in which over 300 African refugees are feared to have died, as a government minister called for an easing of immigration rules. Hundreds of rescuers and army personnel have been deployed to the island of Lampedusa whose seas were described as a 'giant cemetery', with 211 bodies now pulled from the water. AFP PHOTO / ROBERTO SALOMONE (Photo credit should read ROBERTO SALOMONE/AFP/Getty Images) (credit:ROBERTO SALOMONE via Getty Images)
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A picture shows flowers along the coast of Lampedusa on October 6, 2013. Divers recovered 16 more bodies today after a shipwreck in which more than 300 African refugees are feared to have died, as a government minister called for an easing of immigration rules. AFP PHOTO / ROBERTO SALOMONE (Photo credit should read ROBERTO SALOMONE/AFP/Getty Images) (credit:ROBERTO SALOMONE via Getty Images)
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Peope light candles in memory of the victims of Lampedusa on October 4, 2013 in Rome a day after a boat with migrants sank killing more than hundred of people. Flags flew at half mast across Italy and schools held a minute of silence for the victims while President Giorgio Napolitano has called for the overhaul of a law against facilitating illegal immigration that penalises potential rescuers. Emergency services on the remote island -- Italy's southernmost point -- said they had recovered 111 bodies so far and rescued 155 survivors from a boat with an estimated 450 to 500 people on board. AFP PHOTO / TIZIANA FABI (Photo credit should read TIZIANA FABI/AFP/Getty Images) (credit:TIZIANA FABI via Getty Images)
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A migrant rests inside the Temporary Permanance Centre (CPT), refugee camp, on the italian island of Lampedusa on October 6, 2013. The structure contains at the moment more than 400 asylum seekers. Divers in Italy recovered dozens more bodies today after a shipwreck in which more than 300 African refugees are feared to have died, as a government minister called for an easing of immigration rules. Divers working at a depth of some 50 metres (164 feet) described nightmarish scenes under water: bodies trapped in the wreckage, locked in a final embrace or lying on the seabed covered in sand. AFP PHOTO / ROBERTO SALOMONE (Photo credit should read ROBERTO SALOMONE/AFP/Getty Images) (credit:ROBERTO SALOMONE via Getty Images)
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Erithrean migrants walk walk near the Lampedusa airport on October 5, 2013 after a boat with migrants sank killing more than hundred people. Italy mourned today the 300 African asylum-seekers feared dead in the worst ever Mediterranean refugee disaster, as the government appealed for Europe to stem the influx of migrants. Italian emergency services hoped to resume the search for bodies on October 5, 2013 despite rough seas after the accident, in which 111 African asylum-seekers are confirmed dead and around 200 more are still missing. AFP PHOTO / ALBERTO PIZZOLI (Photo credit should read ALBERTO PIZZOLI/AFP/Getty Images) (credit:ALBERTO PIZZOLI via Getty Images)
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Maltese rescue workers lower the corpse of a migrant from a patrol boat of the Armed forces of Malta at Hay Wharf in Valletta on October 12, 2013. More than 140 survivors, plucked from the sea after their overloaded boat sank in the latest deadly migrant tragedy to hit the Mediterranean, arrived in Malta. The sinking killed more than 30, most of them women and children, when the boat packed with people desperate to reach European shores went down off Malta near the Italian island of Lampedusa, according to officials. AFP PHOTO/MATTHEW MIRABELLI (Photo credit should read Matthew Mirabelli/AFP/Getty Images) (credit:AFP via Getty Images)
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A man sits in front of a banner reading 'Lampedusa wants to welcome them alive and not dead' on October 4, 2013 in Lampedusa. Italy mourned today the 300 African asylum-seekers feared dead in the worst ever Mediterranean refugee disaster, as debate raged over Europe's flawed migration policy. Emergency services on the island of Lampedusa said they had recovered 111 bodies and plucked 155 survivors from the water from a boat with an estimated 450 to 500 people on board. AFP PHOTO / ALBERTO PIZZOLI (Photo credit should read ALBERTO PIZZOLI/AFP/Getty Images) (credit:ALBERTO PIZZOLI via Getty Images)
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A child sleeps on a mattress at the 'Temporary Permanence Centre' (CPT) in Lampedusa on October 4, 2013. Italy mourned today the 300 African asylum-seekers feared dead in the worst ever Mediterranean refugee disaster, as debate raged over Europe's flawed migration policy. Emergency services on the island of Lampedusa said they had recovered 111 bodies and plucked 155 survivors from the water from a boat with an estimated 450 to 500 people on board. AFP PHOTO / ALBERTO PIZZOLI (Photo credit should read ALBERTO PIZZOLI/AFP/Getty Images) (credit:ALBERTO PIZZOLI via Getty Images)
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(GERMANY OUT) Thousands of refugees from Africa every year, often unseaworthy vessels reach the Italian island of Lampedusa, between Sicily and Tunisia. It always comes to maritime accidents with casualties (Photo by JOKER / Alexander Stein/ullstein bild via Getty Images) (credit:ullstein bild via Getty Images)
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Pope Francis waves upon arrival during his visit to the island of Lampedusa, a key destination of tens of thousands of would-be immigrants from Africa, on July 8, 2013. Pope Francis called for an end to 'indifference' to the plight of refugees on Monday on a visit to an Italian island where tens of thousands of migrants from Africa and the Middle East first reach Europe. AFP PHOTO / MARCELLO PATERNOSTRO (Photo credit should read MARCELLO PATERNOSTRO/AFP/Getty Images) (credit:MARCELLO PATERNOSTRO via Getty Images)
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A black flag reading 'Shame' in Italian flies in the Lampedusa harbour on October 4, 2013 a day after a boat with migrants sank killing more than hundred people. Italy mourned today the 300 African asylum-seekers feared dead in the worst ever Mediterranean refugee disaster, as debate raged over Europe's flawed migration policy. Emergency services on the island of Lampedusa said they had recovered 111 bodies and plucked 155 survivors from the water from a boat with an estimated 450 to 500 people on board. AFP PHOTO / ALBERTO PIZZOLI (Photo credit should read ALBERTO PIZZOLI/AFP/Getty Images) (credit:ALBERTO PIZZOLI via Getty Images)
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(GERMANY OUT) Automated translation Shipwrecks in Lampedusa. Thousands of refugees from Africa every year, often unseaworthy vessels reach the Italian island of Lampedusa, between Sicily and Tunisia. It always comes to maritime accidents with casualties. Here: A refugee paints the his Boat in his Hand (Photo by JOKER / Alexander Stein/ullstein bild via Getty Images) (credit:ullstein bild via Getty Images)
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(GERMANY OUT) Thousands of refugees from Africa every year, often unseaworthy vessels reach the Italian island of Lampedusa, between Sicily and Tunisia. It always comes to maritime accidents with casualties (Photo by JOKER / Alexander Stein/ullstein bild via Getty Images) (credit:ullstein bild via Getty Images)
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(GERMANY OUT) Italy - Havarie of an overloaded boat with refugee boat at the coast of Lampedusa. Refugees are jumping into the sea. (Photo by JOKER / Alexander Stein/ullstein bild via Getty Images) (credit:ullstein bild via Getty Images)
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An African migrant is carried by policemen to help him disembarking from a boat that had departed two days ago from the town of Zuwarah in western Libya near the border with Tunisia on April 6, 2011 on the Italian island of Lampedusa. Scores of people were missing at sea on Wednesday after a tiny boat carrying more than 200 African migrants fleeing Libya capsized in the night amid three-metre-high waves. AFP PHOTO / Mauro Seminara (Photo credit should read Mauro Seminara/AFP/Getty Images) (credit:AFP via Getty Images)
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A boat carring Tunisian migrants enters the port of Lampedusa on April 12, 2011. Around 26,000 undocumented migrants have arrived in Italy so far this year, including around 21,000 who said they were from Tunisia, claiming they were fleeing a grim economic situation after the political revolution in January. AFP PHOTO / Filippo MONTEFORTE (Photo credit should read FILIPPO MONTEFORTE/AFP/Getty Images) (credit:FILIPPO MONTEFORTE via Getty Images)
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Policemen guard Tunisians would-be immigrants who are waiting to be identified on the Italian island of Lampedusa on March 29, 2011. Tension is rising on the Italian Mediterranean island of Lampedusa over the thousands of immigrants arriving from Libya, with patience running out as the numbers grow. AFP PHOTO / ALBERTO PIZZOLI (Photo credit should read ALBERTO PIZZOLI/AFP/Getty Images) (credit:ALBERTO PIZZOLI via Getty Images)
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Northern African refugees rest in the portual area of the Lampedusa Island. Vessels packed with would be immigrants continue to land in the Island where more than 5000 thousands refugees rest The portual area of Lampedusa has become a second open air immigration centre where immigrants live in critical igenic and sanitary conditions. (Photo by Alessandra Benedetti/Corbis via Getty Images) (credit:Alessandra Benedetti via Getty Images)
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A boat of Tunisian would-be immigrants arrives in Lampedusa.Vessels packed with would be immigrants continue to land in the Island where more than 5000 thousands refugees rest The portual area of Lampedusa has become a second open air immigration centre where immigrants live in critical igenic and sanitary conditions. (Photo by Alessandra Benedetti/Corbis via Getty Images) (credit:Alessandra Benedetti via Getty Images)
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Northern African refugees rest in the portual area of the Lampedusa Island. Despite the efforts of italian government who evacuated more 600 northen african refugees yesterday by the S. Marco ship, boats continues to attrack in the Island the situation is worsening The portual area of Lampedusa has become a second open air immigration centre where immigrants live in critical igenic and sanitary conditions. (Photo by Alessandra Benedetti/Corbis via Getty Images) (credit:Alessandra Benedetti via Getty Images)
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A North African refugee take shelter from the cold on the Island of Lampedusa.The San Marco ship arrived on Wednesday and will accommodate some 1,000 immigrants who have arrived in Lampedusa from Tunisia.The Island of Lampedusa is curently overcrowded with more than 5000 thousands immigrants from Tunisia. (Photo by Alessandra Benedetti/Corbis via Getty Images) (credit:Alessandra Benedetti via Getty Images)
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Daily life of North African refugees dabarq on the Island of Lampedusa.The San Marco ship arrived on Wednesday and will accommodate some 1,000 immigrants who have arrived in Lampedusa from Tunisia.The Island of Lampedusa is curently overcrowded with more than 5000 thousands immigrants from Tunisia. (Photo by Alessandra Benedetti/Corbis via Getty Images) (credit:Alessandra Benedetti via Getty Images)
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North African refugees dabarq on the Island of Lampedusa.The San Marco ship arrived on Wednesday and will accommodate some 1,000 immigrants who have arrived in Lampedusa from Tunisia.The Island of Lampedusa is curently overcrowded with more than 5000 thousands immigrants from Tunisia. (Photo by Alessandra Benedetti/Corbis via Getty Images) (credit:Alessandra Benedetti via Getty Images)
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Policemen check the belongings of Tunisian would-be immigrants after they disembarked from the 'Spica', an Italian Navy boat who rescued them at sea on March 15, 2011 in Lampedusa. 129 would-be immigrants were rescued by the 'Spica' AFP PHOTO / CHRISTOPHE SIMON (Photo credit should read CHRISTOPHE SIMON/AFP/Getty Images) (credit:CHRISTOPHE SIMON via Getty Images)
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Tunisian would-be immigrants wait for their belongings after they disembarked from the 'Spica', an Italian Navy boat who rescued them at sea on March 15, 2011 in Lampedusa. 129 would-be immigrants were rescued by the 'Spica' AFP PHOTO / CHRISTOPHE SIMON (Photo credit should read CHRISTOPHE SIMON/AFP/Getty Images) (credit:CHRISTOPHE SIMON via Getty Images)
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Boats of Tunisian would-be immigrants who arrived on the Italian of Lampedusa are parked on ground on March 15, 2011. AFP PHOTO / CHRISTOPHE SIMON (Photo credit should read CHRISTOPHE SIMON/AFP/Getty Images) (credit:CHRISTOPHE SIMON via Getty Images)
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Migrants are seen during rescue operation in the Mediterranea Sea October 20, 2016. Yara Nardi/Italian Red Cross press office/Handout via Reuters ATTENTION EDITORS - THIS IMAGE WAS PROVIDED BY A THIRD PARTY. EDITORIAL USE ONLY. (credit:Handout . / Reuters)
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NAPLES, NA, ITALY - 2016/10/23: There are about 650 refugees and a dead person being disembarked from the Coast Guard ship 'Bruno Gregoretti', in the city's main port. Aboard Central Africans, Eritreans, Somalis, Afghans and North Africans.The 650 refugees will find accommodation at the reception centers and other structures identified by the Prefectures in the provinces of Naples, Salerno and Caserta. (Photo by Michele Amoruso/Pacific Press/LightRocket via Getty Images) (credit:Pacific Press via Getty Images)
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NAPLES, NA, ITALY - 2016/10/23: There are about 650 refugees and a dead person being disembarked from the Coast Guard ship 'Bruno Gregoretti', in the city's main port. Aboard Central Africans, Eritreans, Somalis, Afghans and North Africans.The 650 refugees will find accommodation at the reception centers and other structures identified by the Prefectures in the provinces of Naples, Salerno and Caserta. (Photo by Michele Amoruso/Pacific Press/LightRocket via Getty Images) (credit:Pacific Press via Getty Images)
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NAPLES, NA, ITALY - 2016/10/23: There are about 650 refugees and a dead person being disembarked from the Coast Guard ship 'Bruno Gregoretti', in the city's main port. Aboard Central Africans, Eritreans, Somalis, Afghans and North Africans.The 650 refugees will find accommodation at the reception centers and other structures identified by the Prefectures in the provinces of Naples, Salerno and Caserta. (Photo by Michele Amoruso/Pacific Press/LightRocket via Getty Images) (credit:Pacific Press via Getty Images)
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A migrant is rescued after the rubber boat he was in sunk some eight nautical miles off Libya's Mediterranean coastline on October 12, 2016.A growing number of people are attempting the treacherous sea journey from Libya or Egypt, after the closure of the Balkan migrant trail route leading from Greece to western Europe. / AFP / ARIS MESSINIS (Photo credit should read ARIS MESSINIS/AFP/Getty Images) (credit:ARIS MESSINIS via Getty Images)
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A migrant is rescued after the rubber boat he was in began to sink some eight nautical miles off Libya's Mediterranean coastline on October 12, 2016.A growing number of people are attempting the treacherous sea journey from Libya or Egypt, after the closure of the Balkan migrant trail route leading from Greece to western Europe. / AFP / ARIS MESSINIS (Photo credit should read ARIS MESSINIS/AFP/Getty Images) (credit:ARIS MESSINIS via Getty Images)
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Migrants and refugees wait to be rescued after the rubber boat they were in began to take on water some eight nautical miles off Libya's Mediterranean coastline on October 12, 2016.A growing number of people are attempting the treacherous sea journey from Libya or Egypt, after the closure of the Balkan migrant trail route leading from Greece to western Europe. / AFP / ARIS MESSINIS (Photo credit should read ARIS MESSINIS/AFP/Getty Images) (credit:ARIS MESSINIS via Getty Images)
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Migrants and refugees are rescued after the rubber boat they were in began to take on water some eight nautical miles off Libya's Mediterranean coastline on October 12, 2016.A growing number of people are attempting the treacherous sea journey from Libya or Egypt, after the closure of the Balkan migrant trail route leading from Greece to western Europe. / AFP / ARIS MESSINIS (Photo credit should read ARIS MESSINIS/AFP/Getty Images) (credit:ARIS MESSINIS via Getty Images)
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A migrant is rescued after the rubber boat he was in sunk some eight nautical miles off Libya's Mediterranean coastline on October 12, 2016.A growing number of people are attempting the treacherous sea journey from Libya or Egypt, after the closure of the Balkan migrant trail route leading from Greece to western Europe. / AFP / ARIS MESSINIS (Photo credit should read ARIS MESSINIS/AFP/Getty Images) (credit:ARIS MESSINIS via Getty Images)
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Refugees and migrant are rescued after the rubber boat they were sailing in sunk some eight nautical miles off Libya's Mediterranean coastline on October 12, 2016.A growing number of people are attempting the treacherous sea journey from Libya or Egypt, after the closure of the Balkan migrant trail route leading from Greece to western Europe. / AFP / ARIS MESSINIS (Photo credit should read ARIS MESSINIS/AFP/Getty Images) (credit:ARIS MESSINIS via Getty Images)
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TOPSHOT - A migrant holds onto a rope during a rescue operation some eight nautical miles off Libya's Mediterranean coastline on October 12, 2016.A growing number of people are attempting the treacherous sea journey from Libya or Egypt, after the closure of the Balkan migrant trail route leading from Greece to western Europe. / AFP / ARIS MESSINIS (Photo credit should read ARIS MESSINIS/AFP/Getty Images) (credit:ARIS MESSINIS via Getty Images)
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A migrant is rescued after the rubber boat he was in sunk some eight nautical miles off Libya's Mediterranean coastline on October 12, 2016.A growing number of people are attempting the treacherous sea journey from Libya or Egypt, after the closure of the Balkan migrant trail route leading from Greece to western Europe. / AFP / ARIS MESSINIS (Photo credit should read ARIS MESSINIS/AFP/Getty Images) (credit:ARIS MESSINIS via Getty Images)
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A woman is lifted from the sea onto a rescue boat after the rubber boat carrying migrants and refugees began to sink some eight nautical miles off Libya's Mediterranean coastline on October 12, 2016.A growing number of people are attempting the treacherous sea journey from Libya or Egypt, after the closure of the Balkan migrant trail route leading from Greece to western Europe. / AFP / ARIS MESSINIS (Photo credit should read ARIS MESSINIS/AFP/Getty Images) (credit:ARIS MESSINIS via Getty Images)
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EDITORS NOTE: Graphic content / The body of a man who died on a rubber boat along with other refugees and migrants lies on a boat in the Mediteranean Sea, north of Libya, on October 5, 2016.Dramatic images of people being rescued in the Mediterranean have once again cast a grim light on Europe's never-ending migrant crisis. In the past two days alone, more than 10,600 migrants have been plucked from barely seaworthy boats off Libya. / AFP / ARIS MESSINIS (Photo credit should read ARIS MESSINIS/AFP/Getty Images) (credit:ARIS MESSINIS via Getty Images)
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TOPSHOT - EDITORS NOTE: Graphic content / Migrants step over dead bodies while being rescued by members of Proactiva Open Arms NGO in the Mediterranean Sea, some 12 nautical miles north of Libya, on October 4, 2016.Twenty-eight Europe-bound migrants were found dead on a day of frantic rescues off Libya, including at least 22 in an overloaded wooden boat, an AFP photographer and the Italian coastguard said. / AFP / ARIS MESSINIS (Photo credit should read ARIS MESSINIS/AFP/Getty Images) (credit:ARIS MESSINIS via Getty Images)
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TOPSHOT - EDITORS NOTE: Graphic content / The bodies of refugees and migrants who died on a rubber boat lie on a boat in the Mediteranean Sea, north of Libya, on October 5, 2016.Dramatic images of people being rescued in the Mediterranean have once again cast a grim light on Europe's never-ending migrant crisis. In the past two days alone, more than 10,600 migrants have been plucked from barely seaworthy boats off Libya. / AFP / ARIS MESSINIS (Photo credit should read ARIS MESSINIS/AFP/Getty Images) (credit:ARIS MESSINIS via Getty Images)
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TOPSHOT - EDITORS NOTE: Graphic content / Migrants step over dead bodies while being rescued by members of Proactiva Open Arms NGO in the Mediterranean Sea, some 12 nautical miles north of Libya, on October 4, 2016.Twenty-eight Europe-bound migrants were found dead on a day of frantic rescues off Libya, including at least 22 in an overloaded wooden boat, an AFP photographer and the Italian coastguard said. / AFP / ARIS MESSINIS (Photo credit should read ARIS MESSINIS/AFP/Getty Images) (credit:ARIS MESSINIS via Getty Images)
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The bodies of refugees and migrants who died on a rubber boat lie on a boat in the Mediteranean Sea, north of Libya, on October 5, 2016.Dramatic images of people being rescued in the Mediterranean have once again cast a grim light on Europe's never-ending migrant crisis. In the past two days alone, more than 10,600 migrants have been plucked from barely seaworthy boats off Libya. / AFP / ARIS MESSINIS (Photo credit should read ARIS MESSINIS/AFP/Getty Images) (credit:ARIS MESSINIS via Getty Images)
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TOPSHOT - EDITORS NOTE: Graphic content / Migrants step over dead bodies while being rescued by members of Proactiva Open Arms NGO in the Mediterranean Sea, some 12 nautical miles north of Libya, on October 4, 2016.At least 1,800 migrants were rescued off the Libyan coast, the Italian coastguard announced, adding that similar operations were underway around 15 other overloaded vessels. / AFP / ARIS MESSINIS (Photo credit should read ARIS MESSINIS/AFP/Getty Images) (credit:ARIS MESSINIS via Getty Images)
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TOPSHOT - A migrant is rescued by members of Proactiva Open Arms NGO in the Mediterranean Sea, some 12 nautical miles north of Libya, on October 4, 2016.At least 1,800 migrants were rescued off the Libyan coast, the Italian coastguard announced, adding that similar operations were underway around 15 other overloaded vessels. / AFP / ARIS MESSINIS (Photo credit should read ARIS MESSINIS/AFP/Getty Images) (credit:ARIS MESSINIS via Getty Images)
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EDITORS NOTE: Graphic content / Migrants sit on a boat next to bodies of other migrants before being rescued by members of Proactiva Open Arms NGO in the Mediterranean Sea, some 12 nautical miles north of Libya, on October 4, 2016.Twenty-eight Europe-bound migrants were found dead on a day of frantic rescues off Libya, including at least 22 in an overloaded wooden boat, an AFP photographer and the Italian coastguard said. / AFP / ARIS MESSINIS (Photo credit should read ARIS MESSINIS/AFP/Getty Images) (credit:ARIS MESSINIS via Getty Images)
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TOPSHOT - EDITORS NOTE: Graphic content / Migrants step over dead bodies while being rescued by members of Proactiva Open Arms NGO in the Mediterranean Sea, some 12 nautical miles north of Libya, on October 4, 2016.At least 1,800 migrants were rescued off the Libyan coast, the Italian coastguard announced, adding that similar operations were underway around 15 other overloaded vessels. / AFP / ARIS MESSINIS (Photo credit should read ARIS MESSINIS/AFP/Getty Images) (credit:ARIS MESSINIS via Getty Images)
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SALERNO, SA, ITALY - 2016/10/05: About 1000 refugees and a dead body are disembarking from the Norwegian navy 'Siem Pilot' in the city's main port. Migrants arrived today have been rescued during several operations of the Navy in Libyan waters and they come mainly from Nigeria, Gambia, Eritrea, Pakistan, Guinea. (Photo by Michele Amoruso/Pacific Press/LightRocket via Getty Images) (credit:Pacific Press via Getty Images)
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Migrants wait to be rescued by members of Proactiva Open Arms NGO in the Mediterranean Sea, some 12 nautical miles north of Libya, on October 4, 2016.At least 1,800 migrants were rescued off the Libyan coast, the Italian coastguard announced, adding that similar operations were underway around 15 other overloaded vessels. / AFP / ARIS MESSINIS (Photo credit should read ARIS MESSINIS/AFP/Getty Images) (credit:ARIS MESSINIS via Getty Images)
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A group of migrants and refugees mainly women and children arriving in Lampedusa in September (credit:Pietro Bartolo)
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Migrants sleep on the deck of the 'Aquarius vessel on the Mediterranean Sea, Friday June 24, 2016, as more than 600 migrants are aboard the ship rescued by SOS Mediterranee and the medical aid group Medecins Sans Frontieres (MSF). The organizations cooperate during search and rescue operations for migrants and refugees from boats in distress in the Mediterranean Sea. (AP Photo/Bram Janssen) (credit:ASSOCIATED PRESS)
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TOPSHOT - A woman faints while refugees and migrants wait to be rescued by members of Proactiva Open Arms NGO in the Mediterranean Sea, some 12 nautical miles north of Libya, on October 4, 2016.At least 1,800 migrants were rescued off the Libyan coast, the Italian coastguard announced, adding that similar operations were underway around 15 other overloaded vessels. / AFP / ARIS MESSINIS (Photo credit should read ARIS MESSINIS/AFP/Getty Images) (credit:ARIS MESSINIS via Getty Images)
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A boat with migrants is seen on the Meditarranean Sea at night, Thursday June 23, 2016. The medical aid group Medecins Sans Frontieres (MSF) and the rescue group SOS Mediterranee cooperate on the vessel to rescue migrants on their way from North Africa to Europe. (AP Photo/Bram Janssen) (credit:ASSOCIATED PRESS)
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Erna Rijnierse, left, a doctor for Medecins Sans Frontieres onboard the "Aquarius" vessel, welcomes a migrant after he just disembaked from a rubber boat in the Mediterranean Sea of the Libyan coast, Friday, June 24, 2016. The medical aid group Medecins Sans Frontieres (MSF) and the rescue group SOS Mediterranee cooperate on the vessel to rescue migrants on their way from North Africa to Europe. (AP Photo/Bram Janssen) (credit:ASSOCIATED PRESS)
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Migrants wait to be rescued by members of Proactiva Open Arms NGO in the Mediterranean Sea, some 12 nautical miles north of Libya, on October 4, 2016.At least 1,800 migrants were rescued off the Libyan coast, the Italian coastguard announced, adding that similar operations were underway around 15 other overloaded vessels. / AFP / ARIS MESSINIS (Photo credit should read ARIS MESSINIS/AFP/Getty Images) (credit:ARIS MESSINIS via Getty Images)
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Doctor Erna Rijnierse holds a training session for crew on how to move injured migrants from the sea to the vessel. "Aquarius" Tuesday June 14, 2016 in the Mediterranean Sea. Medecins Sans Frontieres and SOS Meditarrenee personal attended the course The two humanitarian organisations have joined forces on the vessel to rescue migrants on their way from North Africa to Europe. (AP Photo/Bram Janssen) (credit:ASSOCIATED PRESS)
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Rescue workers disembark migrants from a dinghy in the Mediterranean Sea, rescued by members of the medical aid group Medecins Sans Frontieres (MSF) and the rescue group SOS Mediterranee Rescuers of SOS Mediterranee, Thursday June 23, 2016. The humanitarian groups distribute life jackets to the migrants in distress on the Mediterranean Sea before taking them aboard the 'Aquarius' vessel. (AP Photo/Bram Janssen) (credit:ASSOCIATED PRESS)
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In this photo taken on Saturday, Oct. 8, 2016, forensic pathologist Cristina Cattaneo, center, and her team collect post-mortem data from shipwreck victims to obtain information for a future identification at the Nato base in the Sicilian town of Mellili, Italy. Cattaneo, a professor at the University of Milan, is leading a team of forensic pathologists who have volunteered to identify and catalogue roughly 800 migrants who lost their lives in one of the worst tragedies in the Mediterranean migrant crisis. Her work is a unique, historic project expanding the field of humanitarian legal medicine and also a multi-million euro effort on the part of the Italian government to shame Europe into paying attention to migrants lost at sea and help Italy face the inundation. (AP Photo/Salvatore Cavalli) (credit:Salvatore Cavalli/AP)
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In this photo taken on Saturday, Oct. 8, 2016, forensic pathologist Cristina Cattaneo hoses down a pair of jeans at the Nato base in the Sicilian town of Mellili, Italy. Cattaneo, a professor at the University of Milan, is leading a team of forensic pathologists who have volunteered to identify and catalogue roughly 800 migrants who lost their lives in one of the worst tragedies in the Mediterranean migrant crisis. Her work is a unique, historic project expanding the field of humanitarian legal medicine and also a multi-million euro effort on the part of the Italian government to shame Europe into paying attention to migrants lost at sea and help Italy face the inundation. (AP Photo/Salvatore Cavalli) (credit:Salvatore Cavalli/AP)
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In this photo taken on Saturday, Oct. 8, 2016, Cristina Cattaneo collects post-mortem data from shipwreck victims to obtain information for a future identification at the Nato base in the Sicilian town of Mellili, Italy. Cattaneo, a professor at the University of Milan, is leading a team of forensic pathologists who have volunteered to identify and catalogue roughly 800 migrants who lost their lives in one of the worst tragedies in the Mediterranean migrant crisis. Her work is a unique, historic project expanding the field of humanitarian legal medicine and also a multi-million euro effort on the part of the Italian government to shame Europe into paying attention to migrants lost at sea and help Italy face the inundation. (AP Photo/Salvatore Cavalli) (credit:Salvatore Cavalli/AP)
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In this photo taken on Saturday, Oct. 8, 2016, Cristina Cattaneo, right, and her team collect post-mortem data from shipwreck victims to obtain information for a future identification at the Nato base in the Sicilian town of Mellili, Italy. Cattaneo, a professor at the University of Milan, is leading a team of forensic pathologists who have volunteered to identify and catalogue roughly 800 migrants who lost their lives in one of the worst tragedies in the Mediterranean migrant crisis. Her work is a unique, historic project expanding the field of humanitarian legal medicine and also a multi-million euro effort on the part of the Italian government to shame Europe into paying attention to migrants lost at sea and help Italy face the inundation. (AP Photo/Salvatore Cavalli) (credit:Salvatore Cavalli/AP)
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In this photo taken on Saturday, Oct. 8, 2016, a forensic pathologist wears an apron in a morgue set up at the Nato base in the Sicilian town of Mellili, Italy. A professor at the University of Milan, is leading a team of forensic pathologists who have volunteered to identify and catalogue roughly 800 migrants who lost their lives in one of the worst tragedies in the Mediterranean migrant crisis. (AP Photo/Salvatore Cavalli) (credit:Salvatore Cavalli/AP)
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In this photo taken on Monday, Sept. 19, 2016, Cristina Cattaneo checks victims' personal belongings in a lab in Milan, Italy. Cattaneo, a professor at the University of Milan, is leading a team of forensic pathologists who have volunteered to identify and catalogue roughly 800 migrants who lost their lives in one of the worst tragedies in the Mediterranean migrant crisis. Her work is a unique, historic project expanding the field of humanitarian legal medicine and also a multi-million euro effort on the part of the Italian government to shame Europe into paying attention to migrants lost at sea and help Italy face the inundation. (AP Photo/Antonio Calanni) (credit:Antonio Calanni/AP)
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The wet personal belonging of a migrant man are spread out to dry in the sun after he was rescued from the Mediterranean sea, about 13 miles north of Sabratha, Libya, Monday, Aug. 29, 2016. Some thousands of migrants and refugees were rescued Monday morning from more than 20 boats by members of Proactiva Open Arms NGO before transferring them to the Italian cost guards and others NGO vessels operating at the zone. (AP Photo/Emilio Morenatti) (credit:Emilio Morenatti/AP)
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In this photo taken on Monday, Sept. 19, 2016, victims' personal belongings are displayed on a table in a lab in Milan, Italy. A professor at the University of Milan, is leading a team of forensic pathologists who have volunteered to identify and catalogue roughly 800 migrants who lost their lives in one of the worst tragedies in the Mediterranean migrant crisis. (AP Photo/Antonio Calanni) (credit:Antonio Calanni/AP)
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In this photo taken on Wednesday, Aug. 10, 2016, migrants from Nigeria and Ivory Coast rest on a vessel after being rescued by a Migrant Offshore Aid Station, MOAS team in the central Mediterranean Sea, close to the Libyan territorial waters. (AP Photo/Manu Brabo) (credit:Manu Brabo/AP)
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Migrants sit on a Norwegian Coast Guard boat after being transferred from the Italian Navy Ship Fulgosi during a migrant search and rescue mission off the Libyan Coasts, Tuesday, Sept. 1, 2015. Four dead bodies and hundreds of migrants were transferred on the Norwegian Siem Pilot ship from an Italian Navy ship and a Doctor Without Borders vessels after being rescued in different operation in the mediterranean sea. (AP Photo/Gregorio Borgia) (credit:Gregorio Borgia/AP)
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Migrant women from Nigeria, one of them holding a baby, are rescued by emergency teams from a dinghy as they were sailing at the Mediterranean sea toward the Italian coasts, about 17 miles north of Sabratha, Libya, Sunday, Aug. 28, 2016. More than seven hundred migrants were rescued Sunday morning from seven boats by members of Proactiva Open Arms NGO before transferring them to the Italian cost guards operating at the zone. (AP Photo/Emilio Morenatti) (credit:Emilio Morenatti/AP)
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A baby is helped to board on the Norwegian Siem Pilot ship during a migrant search and rescue mission off the Libyan Coasts, Tuesday, Sept. 1, 2015. Four dead bodies and hundreds of migrants were transferred on the Norwegian Siem Pilot ship from an Italian Navy ship and a Doctor Without Borders vessels after being rescued in different operation in the Mediterranean sea. (AP Photo/Gregorio Borgia) (credit:Gregorio Borgia/AP)
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A migrant carrying an eight month old child arrives with fellow travellers on the beach at Psalidi near Kos Town, Kos, Greece. (credit:Jonathan Brady/PA Archive)
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TOPSHOT - Syrian migrants wait aboard an inflatable dinghy after being rescued while attempting to reach the Greek Island Chios on the Agean Sea near Izmir in the night of December 9 to December 10, 2015. More than 886,000 migrants have arrived in Europe by sea so far this year, according to the latest UN figures. / AFP / BULENT KILIC (Photo credit should read BULENT KILIC/AFP/Getty Images) (credit:BULENT KILIC via Getty Images)
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Migrants wait to be rescued by members of Proactiva Open Arms NGO in the Mediterranean Sea, some 12 nautical miles north of Libya, on October 4, 2016.At least 1,800 migrants were rescued off the Libyan coast, the Italian coastguard announced, adding that similar operations were underway around 15 other overloaded vessels. / AFP / ARIS MESSINIS (Photo credit should read ARIS MESSINIS/AFP/Getty Images) (credit:ARIS MESSINIS via Getty Images)
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TOPSHOT - Migrants wait to be rescued by members of Proactiva Open Arms NGO in the Mediterranean Sea, some 12 nautical miles north of Libya, on October 4, 2016.At least 1,800 migrants were rescued off the Libyan coast, the Italian coastguard announced, adding that similar operations were underway around 15 other overloaded vessels. / AFP / ARIS MESSINIS (Photo credit should read ARIS MESSINIS/AFP/Getty Images) (credit:ARIS MESSINIS via Getty Images)
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Migrants wait to be rescued by members of Proactiva Open Arms NGO in the Mediterranean Sea, some 12 nautical miles north of Libya, on October 4, 2016.At least 1,800 migrants were rescued off the Libyan coast, the Italian coastguard announced, adding that similar operations were underway around 15 other overloaded vessels. / AFP / ARIS MESSINIS (Photo credit should read ARIS MESSINIS/AFP/Getty Images) (credit:ARIS MESSINIS via Getty Images)
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TOPSHOT - EDITORS NOTE: Graphic content / Dead bodies lie on a boat after Europe-bound migrants were rescued by members of Proactiva Open Arms NGO in the Mediterranean Sea, some 12 nautical miles north of Libya, on October 4, 2016.Twenty-eight Europe-bound migrants were found dead on a day of frantic rescues off Libya, including at least 22 in an overloaded wooden boat, an AFP photographer and the Italian coastguard said. / AFP / ARIS MESSINIS (Photo credit should read ARIS MESSINIS/AFP/Getty Images) (credit:ARIS MESSINIS via Getty Images)
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TOPSHOT - EDITORS NOTE: Graphic content / Members of Proactiva Open Arms NGO evacuate a dead body on a stretcher from the third level of a wooden vessel during a rescuing operation in the Mediterranean Sea, some 12 nautical miles north of Libya, on October 4, 2016.At least 1,800 migrants were rescued off the Libyan coast, the Italian coastguard announced, adding that similar operations were underway around 15 other overloaded vessels. / AFP / ARIS MESSINIS (Photo credit should read ARIS MESSINIS/AFP/Getty Images) (credit:ARIS MESSINIS via Getty Images)
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Migrants wait to be rescued by members of Proactiva Open Arms NGO in the Mediterranean Sea, some 12 nautical miles north of Libya, on October 4, 2016.At least 1,800 migrants were rescued off the Libyan coast, the Italian coastguard announced, adding that similar operations were underway around 15 other overloaded vessels. / AFP / ARIS MESSINIS (Photo credit should read ARIS MESSINIS/AFP/Getty Images) (credit:ARIS MESSINIS via Getty Images)
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Migrants and refugees try to arrive as lifeguards help them on the Greek island of Lesbos after crossing the Aegean Sea from Turkey on November 16, 2015. European leaders tried to focus on joint action with Africa to tackle the migration crisis, as Slovenia became the latest EU member to act on its own by barricading its border. / AFP / BULENT KILIC (Photo credit should read BULENT KILIC/AFP/Getty Images) (credit:BULENT KILIC via Getty Images)
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Migrants react as they are being rescued by members of Proactiva Open Arms NGO in the Mediterranean Sea, some 12 nautical miles north of Libya, on October 4, 2016.At least 1,800 migrants were rescued off the Libyan coast, the Italian coastguard announced, adding that similar operations were underway around 15 other overloaded vessels. / AFP / ARIS MESSINIS (Photo credit should read ARIS MESSINIS/AFP/Getty Images) (credit:ARIS MESSINIS via Getty Images)