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- Sasol and Sonatrach present the Hybla

- Sasol and Sonatrach present the Hybla
euro-petrole.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from euro-petrole.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

Augusta in Sicily is the site of a Maltese maritime battle

Augusta in Sicily is the site of a Maltese maritime battle
timesofmalta.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from timesofmalta.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

Augusta mayor complains of port authority s inefficiency in Ponte-Virtù debacle

The mayor of the Sicilian port town of Augusta, Giuseppe Di Mare, has questioned the role of the region’s port authority ADSP, after stopping the departure of the new Maltese ferry service Ponte over a rival bid by competitor Virtù Ferries

The Migrant Ship That Christoph Büchel Displayed at the Venice Biennale Has Gone to Sicily, Where It Will Become a Memorial

Christoph Büchel s controvesial Barca Nostra is towed into place in the Arsenale for the Venice Biennale. Photo by Luca Zanon Awakening/Getty Images. The sunken fishing ship upon which more than 1,000 African migrants died in 2015, and which was later controversially displayed at the Venice Biennale, will now be converted into a permanent memorial in Italy. The ship had been languishing in Venice since 2019, when Swiss-Icelandic artist Christoph Büchel turned it into an incendiary monument to the Mediterranean migration crisis as part of the Venice Biennale. Presented without context or labels, Barca Nostra as Büchel’s installation was called promptly fomented harsh condemnations. (Two of Artnet News’s own writers ranked it among the worst artworks of the year.)

After a Tragedy at Sea, a Wrecked Ship Becomes a Powerful Symbol in Italy

After a Tragedy at Sea, a Wrecked Ship Becomes a Powerful Symbol in Italy The relic of the deadliest shipwreck in the Mediterranean in living memory in which some 1,000 migrants died is being re-envisioned as a human rights monument. The wreck of the ship that was carrying migrants and sank in 2015, left Venice to return to the city of Augusta, Sicily, Italy, last week.Credit.Federico Sutera/The Sea of Memory April 20, 2021, 11:45 a.m. ET ROME To most eyes, the scruffy, sun-faded ship that left Venice for Sicily last week might have looked like a junkyard-ready wreck. Instead, as the ship embarked upon what may be its final voyage, via barge and tugboat, and arrived in Sicily on Tuesday, others were hoping it would become a monument to the devastating toll exacted by the trafficking of people across the Mediterranean from Africa to Europe by unscrupulous operators.

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