6.40 a.m. on 3 October 2013. A 66 foot long wooden fishing boat is approaching the island of Lampedusa. It left the Libyan port of Misrata on 1 October. It is packed with people (probably 543) below and above deck. Most of them are from Eritrea, a few from Ethiopia [Thread] >> 1
They have been travelling for months, paying $600 to get out of Eritrea, $800 to get to Khartoum, another $800 to cross the Sahara into Libya and, finally, $1,600 to cross the Mediterranean on what, for many of them, would become their coffin >> 2
Many Eritreans flee their country, not just because of poverty. It is a dictatorship in which young men are called up for military service & never know how long it will last. It could even be as much as 10 years. Once it is over, they can be called up again >> 3
It is impossible to leave the country legally. As much as 10% of Eritrea's population have fled the country. When they cross into Sudan, many are kidnapped & held hostage until their family pays a ransom allowing them to continue their journey. The women are routinely raped >> 4
Now, they're just half a mile from the port of Lampedusa, the southernmost strip of land in Europe, just half a mile from what they & their families back home hope will be a new life of freedom & dignity. At that point the overworked engine of the dilapidated boat gives out >> 5
It's just before sunrise but shadowy outlines of boats moored near shore can be seen. Faced with the risk of drifting onto rocks, somebody, possibly the 'Captain', possibly one of the migrants, depending on the version, sets fire to a blanket in an attempt to draw attention >> 6
This is a bad idea at the best of times on a wooden boat but desperation after months of perilous existence, being at sea for two days, with barely room to move, and now being so close to safety doesn't favour clear thinking. In this case it is to prove fatal >> 7
The wooden deck of the fishing boat has had fuel spilt on it & this ignites. People panic, instinctively moving away from the flames. This sudden weight shift to one side on a grossly overloaded boat inevitably causes it to capsize. For those below deck there is no escape >> 8
Hundreds of others are hurled into the sea. The water is covered by a film of fuel from the boat. Their cries & the arrival of daylight over the terrible scene make people ashore aware of their plight. The first rescuers to arrive on the scene are tourists on pleasure craft >> 9
Then, local fishing boats join the rescue efforts. As fate would have it, the Coast Guard were still dealing with 463 Syrians who had been saved from another boat in distress just after midnight and so were slow to react to this new drama >> 10
In the immediate aftermath of the sinking, 194 bodies were recovered from the sea & shoreline. On 9 October divers were able to access the wreck at a depth of 47 metres (photo). It took them two days to recover 108 bodies of people trapped below deck when the boat capsized >> 11
Over the following days, further bodies are recovered during search operations until the total reaches 368, including 48 children, the youngest just two years old. A hangar at the island's airport is used to hold the coffins (photo) >> 12
There are 155 survivors. On the basis of survivors' stories, about 20 people are missing whose bodies will never be found. Identification of bodies is difficult & only just over 100 are formally identified. They are buried in Agrigento & numerous other Sicilian cemeteries >> 13
Throughout the phases of this rescue, indeed almost every rescue carried out in 27 years from 1992 to 2019, a constant presence is that of Pietro Bartolo (photo), the doctor responsible for frontline medical services on Lampedusa >> 14
On this occasion, he worked 4 days flat out despite having suffered a mild stroke just a month before. As well as checking the conditions of migrants arriving on this tiny outcrop in the Mediterranean (somewhere between 400k & 500k), Bartolo also certifies the many deaths >> 15
And here, perhaps, is the only happy ending to come out of this tragedy. While checking the corpses laid out in body bags on the jetty at the island's port (photo), Bartolo feels, or rather senses, the faintest hint of a pulse in one of them >> 16
That pulse belongs to Kebrat, who survived, recovered & now lives in Sweden. In the photo below she is reunited with Bartolo at the European Parliament in Brussels in February 2020. After retiring from his work as a doctor, Bartolo was elected as an MEP for Sicily in 2019// ends
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Today, 21 unidentified victims of a migrant boat sinking in the Ionian Sea on 16 June have been buried in a cemetery in the foothills of the Aspromonte mountains, far from media attention, as the Italian government continues to hide the tragedy from public view [Thread] >> 1
In the late evening of 16 June a French yacht in the Ionian Sea, about 120 miles SE of the Italian Coast, encounters a semi-sunken sailing boat (photo) that left Bodrum in Turkey a few days earlier. The yacht recovers 12 survivors & alerts Italian authorities >> 2
Initially, the survivors are transferred to a Portuguese cargo ship and then to an Italian Coast Guard vessel. The survivors land in Roccella Ionica on the morning of 17 June. One dies shortly after landing. They recount that 76 people were aboard, including 26 children >> 3
To celebrate 25 April, this is a slightly revised version of my thread from a few years ago, recounting events surrounding the flight, capture & execution of Mussolini (Photo: last known photo of Mussolini alive, as he leaves Milan on the evening of 25 April 1945) [Thread] >> 1
Around 4 p.m. on 25 April 1945, a meeting is organised between heads of the Fascist 'Repubblica Sociale Italiana" (RSI) & representatives of partisans of the Comitato di Liberazione Nazionale (CLN), with the Archbishop of Milan, Ildefonso Schuster (photo), as mediator >> 2
At this point German forces in Italy are negotiating their surrender to the Allies, who have never dealt directly with Mussolini & the RSI, so the CLN, from a strong position, demands an unconditional surrender from the fascist government >> 3
4April 1945, Italian partisan & Red Cross nurse Cecilia Deganutti (codename 'Joan of Arc') is burnt alive in the crematorium at the Risiera di San Sabba concentration camp in Trieste [Thread] >> 1
Cecilia Deganutti is a nurse working with the Red Cross in her home city of Udine. After Italy's surrender in September 1943, she is assigned to the Red Cross unit at the city's railway station >> 2
Trains carrying Italian soldiers, political prisoners and Jews being deported to German concentration camps pass through this station and Cecilia is often required to provide medical assistance. Whenever possible, she tries to help deportees escape >> 3
On 11 February 2004, Attilio Manca, a 34 year old urologist from Barcellona Pozzo di Gotto (Sicily), dies in his flat in Viterbo in mysterious circumstances. It is suspected he unknowingly operated Bernardo Provenzano & was killed because he recognised his patient [Thread] >> 1
Investigators have ascertained that Bernardo Provenzano underwent a prostrate operation in a private clinic near Marseilles in October 2003. In the same period Attilio Manca tells his family he is in the Marseilles area to examine a patient in preparation for surgery >> 2
Despite his young age, Manca is considered a leader in his field (laparoscopic prostrate surgery). His body is found in his flat on 12 February. The ambulance crew that attends reports that his nose is broken, his face covered in blood and his body heavily bruised all over >> 3
18 January 1994, Democrazia Cristiana, the governing party in Italy for 50 years, is dissolved, Berlusconi founds his party Forza Italia & 'ndrangheta murders two Carabinieri on the A3 motorway, near Scilla in Calabria. These 3 events are closely tied [Thread] >> 1
Most of the information in this thread has been established in the judgment handed down by the Reggio Calabria Corte d'Assise in July 2020, sentencing Giuseppe Graviano (photo) & Rocco Santo Filippone to life imprisonment for ordering the murders & other attacks >> 2
This judgment has been confirmed by the Reggio Calabria Court of Appeal (25 March 1993). Judgment of the Supreme Court of Cassation is pending. Other information has been confirmed by other court judgments. Anything not established by court judgments is indicated as such >> 3
5.20 a.m. Monday 28 December 1908, the prosperous Sicilian port city of Messina is mostly asleep. The evening before saw the inauguration of the city's new public lighting system & a Christmas performance of Verdi's "Aida" at the Vittorio Emanuele Theatre (photo) [Thread] >> 1
The port is crowded with ships, as usual, in the early morning of 28 December. Along the port stands the imposing Palazzata (photo), rebuilt after the destructive earthquake of 1783, along with most other buildings in the city >> 2
At 5:20:27 an earthquake measuring 7.1 on the Richter scale strikes Messina and the city of Reggio Calabria on the other side of the Strait. It lasts 37 interminable seconds. When it ends, hardly a building is standing intact in either city >> 3