Spain on Tuesday deployed a naval patrol boat to pick up migrants on a charity rescue boat that has been stranded off Italy's Lampedusa island for days as Rome refuses it access, after several people jumped overboard in a bid to swim ashore. The Audaz, with a crew of 62, departed Rota in southwestern Spain at 6:30 pm (1630 GMT) for Lampedusa, Spanish public television images showed.
The trip to Lampedusa was expected to take three days. The Audaz will then escort the Open Arms vessel to Palma de Mallorca in Spain's Balearic Islands, the government said in a statement. The navy would look after the migrants from the Open Arms vessel, it added.
Madrid announced it would send the patrol boat shortly after 15 migrants jumped into the water in desperation - some without life jackets - after days on board within tantalising swimming distance of Lampedusa, against the backdrop of a major political crisis in Italy.
They were "rescued and evacuated to Lampedusa," said a spokeswoman for the NGO Proactiva Open Arms that owns the ship, on which the long wait has led to fights and suicide threats as tempers fray. The charity warned the situation was "out of control," with some of the migrants stuck for 19 days after being rescued at sea off the coast of Libya, many suffering from post-traumatic stress.
Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez tweeted: "With this measure Spain will solve, this week, the humanitarian emergency." The vessel has been anchored since Thursday off Lampedusa, seeking permission to dock. There were initially 147 mainly African migrants on the ship but as the days passed, some were evacuated for medical care and all minors were allowed to disembark.
Over 80 are left on board. Six European Union countries - France, Germany, Romania, Portugal, Spain and Luxembourg - have offered to take them all in. But Italy's far-right Interior Minister Matteo Salvini has refused to allow migrant rescue vessels to dock as part of his hardline policies. "Being firm is the only way to stop Italy from becoming Europe's refugee camp again," he tweeted.
Compounding his refusal is a major political crisis in Italy. Salvini has pulled his party out of Italy's ruling coalition, hoping to topple the 14-month-old government and trigger early elections, which polls suggest his anti-immigrant League party and its right-wing allies could win. On Tuesday, Italian Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte announced he would resign.
Faced with Italy's protracted refusal to allow the migrants to disembark, Spain at the weekend offered up its southern port of Algeciras, which the NGO said could "not be achieved" due to the distance and tensions on board. Madrid then suggested Mallorca in the Balearic Islands, nearer but still around 1,000 kilometres (600 miles) from Lampedusa.
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