Italy's Salvini in row with PM over Open Arms migrant ship Published duration 16 August 2019 Related Topics Europe migrant crisis

image copyright Reuters image caption Conditions have deteriorated aboard the crowded rescue ship

A row between Italy's Interior Minister Matteo Salvini and fellow ministers has intensified over a Spanish charity ship anchored off southern Italy with 147 migrants on board.

Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte called Mr Salvini "disloyal" and "obsessed" with keeping migrants out of Italian ports.

Two ministers refused to sign off Mr Salvini's orders banning the Open Arms ship from docking in Lampedusa.

Mr Conte said six EU countries were now "ready to welcome the migrants".

In an open letter to Mr Salvini on Facebook , the prime minister named the countries as: France, Germany, Romania, Portugal, Spain and Luxembourg.

The migrants, rescued off the Libyan coast, have been stuck at sea for two weeks. The tiny isle of Lampedusa has long been a magnet for African migrants fleeing violence and poverty.

As the Open Arms boat anchored off Lampedusa, 13 people were transported to the island. The charity said three needed urgent medical care while several others had been moved for "psychological reasons".

"Everyone on board must disembark urgently. Humanity demands it," it tweeted.

Mr Salvini hit back at Mr Conte on Thursday, saying his "closed ports" policy was working.

"Without this firmness, the European Union would never have lifted a finger, leaving Italy and the Italians alone, as it did in the years of the [Matteo] Renzi and PD [Democratic Party] governments," he wrote on Facebook

The Spanish charity Proactiva Open Arms has been rescuing migrants in the Mediterranean since October 2015.

image copyright open arms image caption Migrants on board the Open Arms

Mr Salvini is feuding with Five Star, the coalition partner of his right-wing League party. Last week Mr Salvini, who is also a deputy prime minister, announced that the alliance was over and Italy should hold fresh elections.

But anti-establishment Five Star and the opposition centre-left PD have stalled any debate on Mr Salvini's no-confidence motion, throwing doubt on his ability to engineer a snap election.

Mr Salvini's League is leading in the opinion polls, having overtaken Five Star, but a coalition between Five Star and the PD is looking increasingly possible.

Five Star leader Luigi Di Maio scorned Mr Salvini's political moves, saying: "Now he regrets it, but the damage is done. Everyone creates their own destiny. Good luck!"