Over 11,600 children crossed the Central Mediterranean Sea to Italy without their parents or legal guardians between January and mid-September 202, according to data collected by UNICEF.
The massive volume was a 60% increase compared to the same period in 2022, where around 7,200 unaccompanied or separated children made the perilous crossing.
Lampedusa, the small island in the south of Italy is often the first port of call for people seeking asylum, safety and opportunities in Europe, where arrivals peaked in September, with 4,800 people arriving on just one single day.
“Children who undertake these harrowing journeys alone are often placed in overcrowded inflatable dinghies or shoddy wooden fishing boats unsuitable for poor weather conditions. Some are placed in the hold of the ship, some on iron barges – particularly dangerous for navigation. The lack of regionwide, coordinated and adequate search and rescue capacities and cooperation at sea on disembarkation compound the dangers children face when crossing,” said Regina De Dominicis, UNICEF Regional Director for Europe and Central Asia and Special Coordinator for the Refugee and Migrant Response in Europe.
Between June and August this year, at least 990 people including children died or disappeared as they attempted to cross the Central Mediterranean Sea, triple the number compared to the same period last summer when at least 334 people lost their lives. Many shipwrecks leave no survivors, and many go unrecorded, making the true number of casualties likely much higher.
War, conflict, violence and poverty are among the main drivers for children fleeing their home countries alone. Evidence shows that unaccompanied children are at risk of exploitation and abuse on every step of their journeys, with girls and children from sub-Saharan Africa the most likely to suffer abuse.
Children who survive their journeys are first held in centres known as hotspots before being transferred to reception facilities that are often closed and limit movement. Over 21,700 unaccompanied children across Italy are currently in such facilities, up from 17,700 a year ago.
“The Mediterranean Sea has become a cemetery for children and their futures. The devastating toll on children seeking asylum and safety in Europe is a result of policy choices and a broken migration system,” De Dominicis said,
“The Mediterranean Sea has become a cemetery for children and their futures. The devastating toll on children seeking asylum and safety in Europe is a result of policy choices and a broken migration system. The adoption of a Europe-wide response to supporting children and families seeking asylum and safety and a sustained increase in international aid to support countries faced by multiple crises are desperately needed to prevent more children suffering.”
In line with international law and the Convention on the Rights of the Child, UNICEF has called on governments to provide safer and legal pathways for seeking asylum and ensure children are not held in closed facilities.