Italy's Salvini agrees to let 27 minors off migrant ship

Premier Giuseppe Conte had written to Interior Minister Matteo Salvini demanding that minors be allowed off the boat

Twenty-seven unaccompanied minors are escorted to police vans as they prepare to leave the harbour in Lampedusa on August 17, 2019, after being evacuated from the Spanish migrant NGO rescue ship Open Arms moored off the coast of the island. Twenty-seven unaccompanied minors have been authorised to leave a migrant rescue vessel in limbo off Italy, the Spanish charity operating the ship said. Italian Far-right Interior Minister Matteo Salvini wrote in a letter to Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte that he could authorise the "alleged" minors to leave the Open Arms ship despite such a move being "divergent to my orientation." - Italy OUT
 / AFP / Alessandro SERRANO
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Italy's hard-line interior minister buckled under pressure Saturday and agreed to let 27 unaccompanied minors leave a migrant rescue ship after two weeks at sea, temporarily easing a political standoff that has threatened the viability of the populist government.

In recent days, Premier Giuseppe Conte had written to Interior Minister Matteo Salvini demanding that minors be allowed off the boat.

After initially refusing, Mr Salvini wrote back Saturday with a three-page missive of his own saying he would do so but made clear it was Mr Conte's choice and that it did not set a precedent.

Spanish aid group Open Arms said the decision concerned 27 unaccompanied minors who were picked up off Libya earlier this month along with more than 100 other migrants.

The minors were transferred Saturday to an Italian border patrol boat for disembarkation and processing on the Sicilian island of Lampedusa. The fate of the other migrants still aboard the Open Arms off Lampedusa remained uncertain.

The standoff laid bare the split between Mr Salvini's anti-migrant League and the 5-Star Movement, which together govern Italy.

Mr Salvini is seeking to end Mr Conte's populist coalition with a no-confidence vote and early election that Mr Salvini hopes will give him the premiership.

Open Arms had won a legal battle to enter Italy's territorial waters, and Mr Conte had secured offers from Spain and five other European Union nations to take the migrants in. But the ship remained off the coast because of Mr Salvini's policy prohibiting humanitarian aid groups from docking.

Open Arms chief Oscar Camps warned Saturday that tensions were rising and fights breaking out that threatened the safety of all on board. He warned European leaders that as of Saturday "we cannot be responsible nor guarantee the security of the people on board Open Arms."

Amid the standoff, the aid group filed a formal complaint with prosecutors in Sicily alleging that both the migrants and the crew were being held hostage.

Mr Salvini and other ministers have been investigated in the past for alleged kidnapping stemming from previous standoffs, but no charges have ever been brought.

The standoff over the Open Arms came as another humanitarian rescue boat, the Ocean Viking, maintained its course off Italy with 356 migrants aboard and no port to disembark.

The Norwegian vessel had plucked the migrants to safety in several rescues in the past few days and is operated by two humanitarian groups, Doctors Without Borders and SOS Mediterranee.

And separately, the sole survivor of a tragedy that he said killed 14 others recalled how he was shouting for help to passing boats and a helicopter but no one heard his pleas.

Mohammed Oga, an Ethiopian, spoke from a Maltese hospital, where he was taken after finally being rescued when his rubber dinghy was spotted by the European border agency Frontex.

In an interview with Malta TV, Oga said the dinghy was carrying 15 people in all, including a pregnant woman, and that he had paid 700 euros to smugglers in the Libyan capital Tripoli for passage to Italy.

"I was shouting to seek help to the helicopter and to the boats that were passing," he said.

Safe in a Maltese hospital, he said he was feeling good but uncertain about the future.

"I am in God's hands," he said.