In a dramatic scene on the sun-soaked Italian island of Lampedusa, long lines of migrants and refugees, including 16-year-old Abubakar Sheriff and his 10-year-old brother, Farde, who hail from Sierra Leone, await their fate at Contrada Imbriacola, the main migrant reception center.
The siblings embarked on a perilous journey, fleeing their homeland and arriving on the island by boat from Tunisia on September 13.
Describing their harrowing journey, Abubakar Sheriff revealed, “We’ve been on this island for four days, have been sleeping outside and not consumed much food or water. We’ve been living on a couple of biscuits. There were 48 people on the boat we arrived in from Tunisia on September 13. It was a scary journey, and I saw some other boats capsizing. But we got lucky.”
The situation on Lampedusa has reached a critical point, with more than 7,000 migrants arriving from Tunisia earlier this week. The mayor, Filippo Mannino, declared a state of emergency, stating that Lampedusa “is in crisis.”
Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni has pledged “immediate extraordinary measures” to address the escalating situation, including the possibility of a European mission to curb arrivals. However, Lampedusa, with a population of only 6,000 and a reception center designed for just 400 migrants, faces immediate challenges.
Flavio Di Giacomo, the spokesperson for the UN’s International Organization for Migration (IOM), emphasized that while the influx has overwhelmed Lampedusa, this is primarily an operational emergency for the island.
He noted that Italy faced similar situations in the past but failed to adequately prepare Lampedusa for the recent surge in arrivals.