Boat survivors tell how
escape from poverty brought them close to death


By
Peter Popham in Rome
10 August 2004
Two crew members of a ramshackle boat found drifting off Sicily
at the weekend have been arrested after 28 passengers died
of cold and dehydration while trying to reach Italy.
The
ship, from Libya, was intercepted by a Polish ship on Saturday
night. Italian police said the men were Liberian nationals
suspected of organising the voyage for profit.
There
seems to be an almost endless chain of human tragedy in the
eastern Mediterranean, "as ineluctable as the monsoon", said
Piero Luigi Vigna, the Italian official in charge of investigating
illegal immigration.
In
the worst disaster, on Christmas Day 1996, at least 200 died
when their flimsy shell sank after colliding with a cargo
ship between Sicily and Malta. On 20 June last year, at least
50 people died when their boat sank off Tunisia, and 160 were
unaccounted for. These tragedies are only the ones we know
about.
But
still they come, thousands every year, making their way from
the misery of sub-Saharan Africa across the desert to the
coast of Libya, paying €1,000 (£670) each or more to brokers
at the port of Al Zuwara on the far west of the Libyan coast
who pack them without food or adequate water into small, unseaworthy
vessels captained by amateurs, without maps or compass. A
journey which in fair weather should take no more than three
days can last a fortnight, or the boat can go down with all
hands. The survivors of the latest tragedy set out between
24 and 28 July. They had reached the Libyan coast in separate
groups from Liberia, Côte d'Ivoire and Sierra Leone. There,
they were penned together in shacks and obliged to wait for
a week.
"They
put us on a boat and said the voyage would be brief," a survivor
told Italian investigators through an interpreter. "We were
crammed in tight, there was little room. That's probably why
they only allowed us to bring a single bottle of water each."
Another
survivor said the two-man crew "didn't seem very expert".
The passage from the coast to Sicily is due north, but the
boat appears to have zigzagged across the Mediterranean for
three or four days before the engine failed. But passengers
had begun to die long before that.
"We'd
been on the boat for a couple of days," said a 25-year-old
Liberian woman, unnamed so far, like all the survivors. "Thirst,
hunger, sun, it was an inferno. It killed my only child, a
one-year-old boy. He was among the first to die. There was
nothing to be done. Me and my husband picked him up and put
him in the sea, because the dead could not be kept on board."
Another
survivor said: "They died one after another and we threw them
into the sea." Of those passengers that made it to Italy,
all but two were men, and one of the surviving women was immediately
whisked to a hospital in Malta by helicopter.
But
even the sturdiest were close to death. "In three years helping
survivors I've never seen anything like it," said Dr Giuseppina
Pignatello, director of maritime medicine at Syracuse, where
the Polish merchant ship Zuiderdiep brought the survivors.
"They
were dehydrated and in an advanced state of hypothermia. I
had a moment of great difficulty; I didn't know where to go
or which to help first. Everywhere I looked I saw people suffering."
Several
survivors are in hospital. But few of them are likely to benefit
from their ordeal. Under Italy's tough illegal immigrant law,
most will be expelled. The Italian interior ministry said
1,752 illegal immigrants entered Italy by boat in the first
five months of 2004, down from 3,936 in the similar period
last year.