(ANSA) - Rome, July 13 - Interior Minister Matteo Salvini
said Friday a boat carrying 450 migrants, now in
Maltese-competence waters, can't come to Italy, as he wrestled
with another migrant case that pitted him against President
Sergio Mattarella and caused a government split.
Salvini said "a boat with 450 CLANDESTINES aboard has since
this morning been in waters under the competence of Malta, which
has said it will intervene.
"Let Malta, the migrant smugglers and the do-gooders of all
of Italy and all the world know that this boat CANNOT and MUST
NOT arrive in an Italian port.
"We've already done our bit, understood?"
The Italian foreign ministry sent a note to the Maltese
embassy in Rome saying that Rome asked Valletta to meet its
responsibilities with the maximum urgency.
The coordination of the case is up to Malta's Rescue
Co-ordination Centre (RCC), the ministry stressed.
Transport Minister Danilo Toninelli said "Malta must
immediately do its duty" in the case.
Salvini said earlier he would get to the bottom of an alleged
migrant "mutiny" on board a rescue ship earlier this week.
President Mattarella "didn't interfere" when he instructed
Premier Giuseppe Conte to offload a coast guard ship carrying 67
migrants at Trapani after Salvini blocked it because of the
alleged incident on board the previous ship that first picked up
the migrants, Salvini said.
The president "has never interfered with what I have done as
interior ministers", said Salvini in reference to the Diciotti
ship which had picked up the migrants from private Italian
oilrig tug Vos Thalassa, where the alleged protest, allegedly
led by a Ghanaian and a Senegalese man, allegedly took place.
The Vos Thalassa crew have reportedly said the crew was
surrounded by the migrants and the first mate was pushed.
But the migrants have said they didn't attack anyone and were
only afraid of being taken back to Libya, causing "confusion".
Judicial sources have said there may be arrests and one of
the two alleged ringleaders of the protest may be a people
trafficker.
Salvini went on: "I have nothing to clear up.
"If, however, Mattarella wants to understand what I did I'm
at his disposal, but the fight against illegals is one of the
country's priorities.
"The only thing that would make me angry is if all those who
came off the Diciotti got off scot free, someone must pay.
"There must be certainty of punishment.
"I hope the prosecutors hurry up, it can't end up in
sweetness and light".
Salvini had earlier said he would "go on to the end" to "get
to the bottom" of what happened among the migrants.
He said "I will go to the end until someone is handed over to
justice.
"I'm interior minister and I will do my utmost to defend the
security of Italians, what I am doing is blocking departures,
landings and deaths".
Salvini's coalition partner Luigi Di Maio said "Mattarella's
decision must be respected".
The deputy premier and labour and industry minister said: "I
believe that if the president intervened we must respect his
decisions".
Salvini is also a deputy premier and leader of the
anti-migrant League party.
He has been cracking down on migrants and has stopped NGO
ships from docking in Italian ports.
Di Maio is the leader of the anti-establishment 5-Star
Movement (M5S).
Magistrates union ANM on Friday called for an end to
"interference" in the work of Trapani prosecutors investigating
the two migrants that landed from the Diciotti coast guard ship
Thursday night.
"The work of the Trapani prosecutors must be allowed to
proceed without interference," the ANM said, referring to the
pressure from Salvini.
The union said all calls for intervention were "unjustified
and not in line with the principles of autonomy and independence
laid down by the Constitution, to which everyone must keep".
Justice Minister Alfonso Bonafede said that "magistrates work
in full independence and autonomy with respect to political
power".
He said "I want to reassure everyone.
"Salvini expressed his opinion, he meant to say that if
someone did wrong they must pay, but the facts speak clearly and
they are showing this with the Diciotti case".
The crew of the Vos Thalassa oil-rig tug felt "seriously
threatened" by the reaction of migrants when they were told they
being taken back to Libya, sources at the Trapani prosecutor's
office said Friday.
The captain reportedly told prosecutors the migrants had
surrounded the crew shouting "no Libya, Libya, yes Italy".
As well as surrounding the crew, they allegedly pushed the
first mate, sources said.
This was when the captain decided to get in touch with the
Rome port commander's office, which sent coast guard vessel
Diciotti to offload the migrants.
The first questioning of the 67 migrants will take place
today, sources said.
Some of the migrants told a UNICEF official Friday that they
were afraid of being returned to Libya but did not attack anyone
on board the Vos Thalassa oilrig tug that had picked them up,
contrary to reports.
"We didn't attack anyone, there was 5-10 minutes of great
confusion and fear, but we didn't want to hurt anyone," they
told Italo-Egyptian UNICEF/Intersos officer Sahar Ibrahim on
board the coast guard ship that took them on, the Diciotti.
"We were terrified, we didn't want to go back to Libya: we
were ready to dive into the sea and risk our lives rather than
being returned to land".
A coast guard cutter rescued 31 Syrian migrants and took
them to Lampedusa Friday, including 17 children, 10 of whom were
wearing red T-shirts, and a pregnant woman, sources said.
Many migrants dress their children in red to make them easier
to spot in cases of shipwreck.
Boat with 450 migrants mustn't come to Italy says Salvini
Will get to bottom of migrant 'mutiny' vows interior minister