Rescued migrants escaping North Africa expected to arrive Sunday in Spain

Hundreds of migrants escaping violence and poverty in North Africa are due to arrive in Spain on Sunday. They’re aboard the Aquarius — a former German Coast Guard ship now being used for 토토 사이트 추천 안전 놀이터 humanitarian rescues.

On the rescue ship, women cradle babies, kids play games and people sleep — waiting for their ship to reach land. 

The migrants’ tumultuous journey began last weekend, when they left Libya for Europe crammed onto inflatable boats. When heavy winds tossed some passengers into the sea, rescuers intervened and saved 629 people.

“We were just, ‘Go, go, go!'” said Max Avis, the deputy search and rescue chief of the Aquarius. “Trying to get lifejackets, throwing at them at the people as they fell.”

Italy helped with the rescue operation, but the country’s newly elected populist government refused to let the Aquarius dock on its shores. Malta said no too, exposing deep divisions over undocumented migrants fleeing to Europe.

“We have the most vulnerable of the vulnerable on the ship right now … and they’re being used to transport across the Mediterranean for some idiotic exercise of political influence. And these people are suffering,” Avis said.

On Monday, came news that Spain would take the ship in. The migrants — mostly from Africa — will join roughly 37,000 others the U.N. says have reached European shores so far this year.

 As the Aquarius prepares to arrive at Spain’s eastern port of Valencia on Sunday, spirits on board are lifting, but human rights activists worry others won’t be as lucky because this episode may have set a precedent of turning migrants away.

The U.N. says nearly 800 people have died or disappeared trying to cross the Mediterranean to get to Europe this year. EU leaders are set to discuss asylum rules at a summit at the end of this month. 

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A U.S. official told CBS News that Nafis considered targeting President Obama before settling on the Federal Reserve building just blocks from the World Trade Center site but those considerations never got beyond the discussion stage. On “CBS This Morning” Thursday, CBS News senior correspondent John Miller reported that Nafis had made statements that he was in contact with a Qaeda network before he arrived in the United States in January. But there was no allegation that Nafis actually received training or direction from the terrorist group. In conversations recorded by the FBI, Miller reports Nafis allegedly said he admired the radical U.S.-born cleric Anwar al-Awlaki, who inspired the “underwear bomber,” Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab, and the accused Fort Hood shooter, Maj. Nidal Hasan. Even after Awlaki was killed in a drone strike, his magazine, called Inspire, supplied Nafis with the outlines for his plot. Prosecutors said Nafis traveled to the U.S. on a student visa in January to carry out an attack. Hours after his arrest, Bangladeshi detectives were at his family’s three-story home in the Jatrabari neighborhood in south Dhaka. “We are just collecting details about Nafis from his family,” one officer said, speaking on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak to the media. Nafis’ family said he was incapable of such actions and he went to America to study business administration, not to carry out any attack. Nafis was so timid, he couldn’t even venture out onto the roof alone, his father said. “He used to take someone to go the roof at night. I can’t believe he could be part of it (the plot).” “He is very gentle and devoted to his studies,” he said, pointing to Nafis’ time studying at the private North South University in Dhaka. However, Belal Ahmed, a spokesman for the university, said Nafis was a terrible student who was put on probation and threatened with expulsion if he didn’t bring his grades up. Nafis eventually just stopped coming to school, Ahmed said. Ahsanullah said his son convinced him to send him to America to study, arguing that with a U.S. degree he had a better chance at success in Bangladesh. “I spent all my savings to send him to America,” he said. CBS News reports that Nafis was enrolled at Southeast Missouri State University for the spring semester earlier this year and that he was pursuing a degree in cyber security; he is no longer enrolled there. He was pursuing a bachelor’s degree in cybersecurity. University spokeswoman Ann Hayes told The Associated Press that Nafis requested a transfer of his records in July and the university complied, though she couldn’t say where the records were transferred. Mohammad Arif Akunjee, a childhood friend, said Nafis wanted to be a businessman. Just a few hours before his arrest, Nafis talked to his mother over Skype to update her on his plans, Bilkis said. “My brother told my mother that he was doing well in studies in the U.S. and was transferring to a college in New York,” said his sister. Early Thursday, a relative living in Switzerland called to tell the family Nafis had been arrested. “We woke up with this terrible news. We just can’t believe it,” she said. Ahsanullah called on the government to “get my son back home.” Bangladesh does not have the same record of involvement in global terrorism as Pakistan, with which it once formed a nation before winning its independence in 1971. At least one Bangladeshi was among those detained by the U.S. at Guantanamo Bay Naval Base in Cuba.

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