A baby born at sea on Christmas Day after his Nigerian mother was plucked from a floundering migrant boat by the Italian navy has been baptised Testimony Salvatore in honour of the medics who delivered him.
The two-day old infant, who weighed in at 2.7 kilogrammes and his 28-year-old mother were both recovering in hospital yesterday after what was a smooth delivery in testing circumstances, according to the gynaecologist who oversaw it.
The cheering Christmas tale came as it was reported that Italian authorities have identified a 32-year-old Egyptian man as a lynchpin in the large-scale people smuggling that has been instrumental in sending asylum seekers and economic migrants across the Mediterranean in unprecedented numbers this year.
More From This Section
The broadsheet daily said he was based in the Kafr el-Sheikh Governorate in northern Egypt and had been identified as a result of intercepted mobile calls to traffickers working for him on boats leaving Libya.
Little Testimony entered the world at 20 minutes before midnight on December 25, aboard the Italian navy vessel Etna as it headed to the Sicilian port of Messina.
The ship had just helped to rescue hundreds of would-be immigrants from boats destined for, but ill-equipped to reach, Europe's southern shores.
"The lady was brilliant," said gynaecologist Maita Sartori. "She did everything herself, all we had to was to be there and monitor the labour, talking to her in English."
The mother, whose first name is Kate according to Italian media, was travelling with Testimony's 15-month-old sister and was quoted as saying: "I'm really happy with the birth of my son. I was really scared but everything went well in the end."
She told reporters the family had left Nigeria two months ago and that she and her youngest child had boarded a boat in Libya on December 23, having left her husband and two older sons, aged 6 and 10, in neighbouring Algeria.
Italian naval vessels picked up a total of 2,300 people from troubled boats over the Christmas period, lifting to almost 170,000 the number of migrants from north Africa registered as having landed on Italian soil this year.
More than 80 per cent of the migrants leave from Libya, where traffickers are able to operate with impunity because of the chaos engulfing a country that has disintegrated into warring fiefdoms.