Newborn among first migrants for 2012
US patrol involved in search
Photo: Matthew Mirabelli
A newborn baby girl was among the first group of 68 migrants to arrive this year and the second since the fall of the Gaddafi regime in November.
The group was brought ashore by the Armed Forces of Malta in two lots after having been saved from the high seas and from their 40-foot long white rubber dinghy.
The baby was born on a patrol boat during the operation to rescue the migrants about 56 miles south-west of Malta on Saturday night.
Alarm was raised by a foreigner, resident in Malta
The child and her mother, believed to be a Somali, are recovering at Mater Dei Hospital.
Another woman claimed she miscarried during the trip on the dinghy, which the migrants said started three days ago from Tunisia. However, sources said they believed the trip actually started from Libya.
The two women together with 23 others picked up by the patrol boat were brought to Malta early yesterday morning. Some of them needed medical attention.
Another 43 migrants who formed part of the same group were picked up by the Italian cargo ship Verona and were landed at Malta Freeport in the afternoon.
The search for the migrants started on Friday when the alarm was raised by a foreigner resident in Malta.
A Maltese patrol boat, an AFM aircraft and a PC-3 Orion maritime patrol aircraft of the US Air Force based at Sigonella were deployed for the search operation.
On December 6, a boatload of 44 migrants from Somalia landed in Malta after having been rescued in rough seas. They claimed two fellow migrants had perished during the voyage.
Before that, a group of 76 had arrived in June. They were rescued after encountering difficulties as they fled from Misurata.
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Louise Vella
Jan 16th, 16:36
A newborn baby is always sweet. But how many thousands of sweet newborn baby immigrants is Malta expected to carry and pay for? And at whose expense? Will UNHCR pay for them?
We are told that "the immigrants said they started three days ago from Tunisia. However, sources said they believed the trip actually started from Libya". So the quoted "sources" know that the system is based on untruths. In his annual reports, the Commissioner for Refugees says his task is rendered more difficult because of the untrue stories told by applicants for refugee status and the false documents they present, usually with the cooperation of UNHCR and the NGOs. Will the newly arrived illegal immigrants give their true names? Will they tell about the true circumstances of their leaving Libya (sorry, Tunisia) and their trip?
We are also told that "the alarm was raised by a foreign resident in Malta". So it seems we have a fifth column in Malta of people who not only came in illegally but are leading more of their country-men, country-women and country-babies to come here, illegally too.