Macron ‘never meant to offend’ Italy with migrant comments

Macron ‘never meant to offend’ Italy with migrant comments

PARIS
Macron ‘never meant to offend’ Italy with migrant comments

French President Emmanuel Macron sought to resolve tensions with Italy on June 14, saying he never meant to cause offence by criticizing its rejection of a migrant ship in remarks that sparked fury in Rome.

Macron had on June 12 ignited the worst Franco-Italian diplomatic spat in years by accusing Rome of “cynicism and irresponsibility” for refusing to take in 629 migrants left stranded on a rescue ship that was eventually welcomed by Spain.

Rome summoned the French ambassador and cancelled a meeting between the countries’ economy ministers while threatening to call off talks between Macron and Italian premier Giuseppe Conte in Paris on June 15 unless France issued an “official apology.”

But the tensions appeared to have ebbed after a telephone call late on June 13 between Macron and Conte.

“The president stressed that none of his comments were intended to offend Italy and the Italian people,” Macron’s office said in a statement, adding that Friday’s lunch meeting with Conte would go ahead as planned.

Conte told reporters in Rome that the exchange was “very cordial.”

Asked whether he thought the dispute was over, he said: “I very much think so, yes.

“But now we need to work on reform of the Dublin Agreement,” he added in reference to controversial EU rules which require migrants to apply for asylum in the country where they first arrive.

That has put pressure on Italy and Greece, the main entry points for people fleeing war and poverty in the Middle East, Africa and Asia.

The confirmation of Conte’s Paris visit came minutes after Italy’s deputy prime minister Luigi Di Maio said Rome would “not back down” without a French apology.

“The day when people thought they could make a mockery of Italy is over,” Di Maio, leader of the Five Star Movement that shares power with the far-right League, was quoted by the Agi news agency as saying.

The plight of the Aquarius rescue ship - which is en route to Spain - has again shone a light on the failure of EU members to band together in the face of an unprecedented influx of migrants across the Mediterranean since 2015.

An EU scheme to distribute migrants equitably around the bloc has failed miserably, with central European members flatly refusing the quotas and others, including France, falling far short of their allocated target.

Charities have sounded the alarm over the toll the crisis is taking on migrant lives.

On June 14, four people were given 25-year jail sentences in Hungary over the gruesome deaths of 71 migrants who suffocated in a truck on an Austrian highway three years ago.

Italy has received more than 700,000 migrants and refugees since 2013.

Many West Africans try to continue on to France, where they speak the language and often have relatives, only to find the border shut to them.

Thousands of those who manage to sneak across the Alps have been detained and sent back to Italy.

In a swipe at France, Italy’s government said it will not accept “hypocritical lessons from countries that have preferred to look the other way on immigration.”

Macron, in his call with Conte, called for closer cooperation between Rome and Paris to try to check the migrant flows at their source - currently mainly in Africa.

France had “always defended the need for greater European solidarity with the Italian people”, he said.

The issue of how to share the migrant burden is expected to dominate an EU summit at the end of June.

While Italy has taken much of the flak over the Aquarius, Macron has come in for criticism at home - for remaining silent for two days while the ship was adrift and then laying the blame solely at Italy’s feet.

European Affairs Minister Nathalie Loiseau defended France’s record on June 14.

“France last year received a record number of asylum seekers,” she said, with 100,000 requests.

France, she added, had also taken the second-biggest share of migrants relocated from Greece and Italy.

“We’re doing a lot but it’s true: Europe must do more and must do better to help Italy,” she said.

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