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Friday, 21 July 2006, 21:23 GMT 22:23 UK

Malta migrants allowed on shore

Spanish trawler with migrants at port A group of African migrants who had been stranded off the Maltese coast for eight days are being flown to Spain.

The 51 migrants were allowed to disembark at La Valletta on Friday after Madrid agreed to take on most of the group who are mainly from Eritrea.

While Malta said it would take three migrants, the others will be taken in by Spain, Italy and Andorra.

Since January almost 1,000 immigrants have landed on Malta, which has a total population of 400,000.

Spain is also dealing with its own immigration crisis in the Canary Islands, with some 11,000 African migrants arriving on the island chain so far this year.

Disagreements

Malta had initially refused to allow the ship to dock, saying the Africans were rescued outside its territorial waters.

Three of the migrants, a pregnant woman, a mother and a baby, were allowed ashore on Tuesday for medical treatment.

It had said the men, women and children were the responsibility of Spain or Libya since the boat was Spanish and the migrants were picked up in Libya's search-and-rescue zone.

Ten migrants, originally destined for Libya, will now be taken on by the United Nations refugee agency.

Intervention by the EU helped to resolve the crisis.

Criticism

"Europe has finally realised our limits. This has been an example of collaboration and how such a burden can be shared"
Michael Frendo, Maltese Foreign Minister

EU plans rapid reaction border teams

Malta has received strong criticism from human rights groups for its actions during this crisis, says the BBC's Danny Wood in Madrid.

But Malta, which joined the EU in 2004, says it has no more capacity to deal with illegal immigrants and has been pressing the EU to help.

The European Commission's leading role in resolving the crisis is a sign that the EU is getting serious about helping member states with illegal immigration problems, our correspondent says.

"Europe has finally realised our limits. This has been an example of collaboration and how such a burden can be shared," Malta's Foreign Minister Michael Frendo said.

On Wednesday, a plan to create rapid reaction teams of border guards to deal with European Union immigration crises was unveiled by the European Commission.

Heroes

A Maltese policeman holding an Eritrean baby in a Spanish Air Force plane at La Valetta

Meanwhile, the Spanish crew which rescued the migrants last Friday have been hailed as heroes in Spain.

"What they did shows the sort of men they are," Pepi Irles, wife of the boat's captain, told reporters.

The Spanish government said it would award the crew a merit medal for saving 51 lives, Reuters news agency reported.

One of the ship's crew members said that after their experience at sea together, the migrants were like his family and he was sad to see them go, our correspondent says.




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Related to this story:
Bid to solve Malta migrant crisis (19 Jul 06 |  Europe )
Countries agree migration plans (11 Jul 06 |  Africa )
Malta alarmed by migrant influx (04 Jul 06 |  Europe )
African migrants' desperate journey (06 Jul 06 |  Africa )
Migrants die at Spanish enclave (03 Jul 06 |  Africa )
Spain to get migrant patrol help (30 May 06 |  Europe )
Immigrant frustration for Malta (21 Oct 05 |  Europe )
UN blasts Maltese asylum policy (18 Jan 05 |  Europe )
Island migrants: Has Italy gone too far? (08 Oct 04 |  Europe )
Country profile: Malta (12 Jul 06 |  Country profiles )

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