Aquarius migrants step ashore in Spain after week-long ordeal

The 630 migrants whose rescue sparked a major migration row in Europe arrived in the Spanish port of Valencia on Sunday after a turbulent week that saw Italy and Malta turn them away. The Aquarius, which has been at the centre of the crisis, sailed into Valencia harbour about 10:30 am (0830 GMT) with 106 migrants on board to applause from police, health workers and translators waiting on the pier. Under blue skies, migrants danced and sang, their excitement captured in footage released on Twitter by SOS Mediterranee which operates the rescue vessel with Doctors Without Borders (MSF). The remaining migrants arrived on an Italian coastguard ship, the Dattilo, and an Italian navy vessel, the Orione. They had been transferred from the Aquarius to make the voyage safer and more comfortable. Medical staff wearing white overalls, gloves and masks went on board the three ships to carry out initial checks before the migrants disembarked in groups of 20. They were welcomed by a team of more than 2,000 people, including 470 translators and 1,000 Red Cross volunteers who distributed blankets, clothes and hygiene kits. High waves and winds had forced the convoy to take a detour on its 1,500-kilometre (930-mile) voyage to Spain. "It is the end of a far-too-long voyage," said the head of MSF Spain, David Noguera. - 'Lost moral compass' - At the port, a huge banner was hung up saying "Welcome home" in various languages including Arabic. Among the passengers are 450 men and 80 women -- at least seven of them pregnant -- as well as 89 adolescents and 11 children under the age of 13, figures released by the Valencian authorities show. The majority are from Africa. A total of 144 migrants were taken to hospital for treatment -- mainly for scratches and burns -- and only six were expected to stay overnight, the regional government of Valencia said in a statement. The migrants were given three forms to fill out, one to ask to stay in Spain for 45 days, one to ask for asylum in Spain and another to ask for asylum in France, according to Noguera. Carmen Moreno, a doctor and Red Cross volunteer who helped look after the migrants after they disembarked, said they were "very excited and hopeful". "They also look tired," she told AFP. The Aquarius rescued the migrants off Libya's coast last weekend but Italy's new populist government and Malta both refused to let it dock, accusing each other of failing to meet their humanitarian and EU commitments. Spain eventually stepped in and agreed to receive the refugees as a "political gesture" to "oblige Europe to forge a common policy to a common problem," Foreign Minister Josep Borrell said. France said Saturday it would welcome Aquarius migrants who meet the criteria for asylum. "The situation cannot repeat itself. The inaction of Europe is criminal," SOS Mediterranee cofounder Sophie Beau told a news conference in Valencia. MSF emergency coordinator Karline Kleijer said the affair shows "how Europe has lost its moral compass in the Mediterranean." "These men women and children fled poverty and wars," she told the same news conference. - 'Voyages of death' - The plight of the Aquarius has again highlighted the failure of EU member states to work together to deal with the influx of migrants since 2015. After Rome's decision to ban the Aquarius, Macron and Italian premier Giuseppe Conte met Friday and called for the EU to set up asylum processing centres in Africa to prevent "voyages of death". They also demanded "profound" changes to the EU asylum rules which put the migrant burden on their country of entry to Europe -- mainly Italy and Greece. Italy's far-right Interior Minister Matteo Salvini warned Saturday that other NGO operated rescue ships would also be banned from docking. He criticised other EU nations on Sunday for not taking their fair share of refugees, and hoped Spain would "receive 66,000 other (migrants) and that the Portuguese, the Maltese and others could also receive them". However, 42 migrants rescued this week by a US ship off Libya before being transferred to an Italian coastguard vessel already carrying 500 migrants would be allowed to land in Italy, media reported in Rome on Sunday. The USS Trenton also picked up 12 dead bodies during the rescue. Nearly 1,000 migrants arrived Friday and Saturday in the south of Spain, the third busiest gateway for migrants into Europe after Italy and Greece. On Sunday, 60 activists who marched from the French-Italian border town of Ventimiglia -- a bottleneck for migrants travelling north -- arrived in Paris where they joined around 2,000 protestors at a rally calling on Europe to do more to welcome migrants and refugees.