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Death toll spikes as new European policies push migrants towards more dangerous sea routes

A closer look at the day's most notable stories with The National's Jonathon Gatehouse: tougher anti-migrant policies in Europe are leading to more deaths at sea, experts warn; Creed II may be Hollywood how-to for sequels; residents of Paradise, Calif., want answers about problems with evacuation.

Newsletter: A closer look at the day's most notable stories

Members of the Spanish Civil Guard inspect the body of a dead migrant found on the beach at the village of Canos de Meca on Nov. 12, where 17 bodies were recovered from the sea after their small vessel hit rocks. (Javier Fergo/Associated Press)

Welcome toTheNational Today newsletter, which takes a closer look at what's happening around some of the day's most notable stories. Sign up hereand it will be delivered directly to your inbox Monday to Friday.

TODAY:

  • Tougher anti-migrant policies in Europe are leading to a major increase in the number of deaths at sea.
  • Hollywood's reboot mania has found a successful formula with Creed II.
  • As the search continues for hundreds still missing in fire that swept through the Paradise, Calif., residents have tough questions for officials about their handling of the evacuation.
  • Missed The National last night? Watch it here.


More danger for migrants

Desperate migrants are choosing ever more dangerous sea routes to Europe and using smaller and less seaworthy boats, causing a sharp increase in drowning deaths, warns the International Organization for Migration.

So far this year, at least 631 African migrants have died while attempting to reach Spain, a threefold increase from all of 2017.

"This is usually a time of slowing down on these routes, that is not happening in Spain," Joel Millman, an IOM spokesman, told a news briefing in Geneva this morning.

Members of Spanish civil guard carry the corpse of a migrant from a police dinghy at the harbour after it was recovered off the coast off Barbate, Spain, on Nov. 6. (Javier Fergo/Associated Press)

In one of the deadliest incidents, earlier this month at least two dozen North African migrants drowned in stormy seas near Cadiz, within sight of the Spanish shore.

The European Union's success in cutting deals to close off the sea routes from Turkey to Greece, and from Libya to Italy, has resulted in an overall drop in the number of migrants arriving on the continent 128,265 so far this year, compared to almost 187,000 in 2017, and 390,000 in 2016.

But it appears to have had a knock-on effect, pushing the migrants further and further west.

Some are now even arriving in the Canary Islands, a Spanish archipelago 100 kilometres off the Moroccan coast. At least 36 migrants have died trying to make that crossing in 2018, compared to one the year before.

A rescuer carries a migrant child, intercepted off the coast in the Mediterranean Sea, after arriving on a rescue boat at the port of Malaga in southern Spain on Oct. 19. (Jon Nazca/Reuters)

Migrants are also now being plucked from the sea off the British coast, with at least 76 people rescued from nine boats off Dover over the past two weeks, although it appears that they are making the crossing from France.

Yet despite the concerns over the rising death toll, many European nations seem focused on enacting even tougher anti-migrant policies.

This week, prosecutors in Sicily moved to seize a migrant rescue vessel operated by Medecins Sans Frontires and another aid organization, accusing the groups of illegally dumping of 24 tonnes of "potentially toxic waste" during stops in Italian ports.

Crew members stand aboard the Aquarius as it arrives in Senglea, Malta, on Aug. 15. This week, prosecutors in Sicily moved to seize the migrant rescue vessel operated by Medecins Sans Frontires. (Matthew Mirabelli/AFP/Getty Images)

MSF rejects the charges, saying it followed standard procedures while disposing of the food, clothing and medical waste left behind by rescued migrants. But the dispute is keeping the vessel docked in southern France, rather than patrolling the Mediterranean.

And soon, Italy's parliament will vote on a new immigration law proposed by the populist government that will remove humanitarian protections for migrants and block asylum seekers from accessing services. These are moves that UN human rights experts have said will "certainly" violate international law.

Meanwhile in Hungary, Prime Minister Viktor Orbn is ratcheting up his attacks on the European Union, calling it a "transport agency" for migrants that hands out funds and "anonymous bank cards" to "terrorists and criminals."

"This is the kind of slippery slope which could again lead to a broken Europe," Orbn declared today in an interview on Hungarian public radio.

Hungary's Prime Minister Viktor Orban lashed out at the European Union's policy on migrants on Friday in a radio interview. (Georg Hochmuth/AFP/Getty Images)

Anti-immigrant sentiment is undeniably on the rise in Europe.

This week, the Guardian newspaper crunched the voting results from 31 European elections over the past 20 years. It found that populist parties have tripled their support and managed to put their leaders into positions of power within 11 different governments.

And yesterday, Hillary Clinton issued a warning to Europe's politicians, saying that they need to solve the migrant crisis if they want to stop the rise of the far right.

"I think Europe needs to get a handle on migration, because that is what lit the flame," the former U.S. Secretary of State said in an interview.

"I admire the very generous and compassionate approaches that were taken, particularly by leaders like Angela Merkel, but I think it is fair to say Europe has done its part, and must send a very clear message 'We are not going to be able to continue to provide refuge and support' because if we don't deal with the migration issue it will continue to roil the body politic."

To date in 2018, 2,075 migrants have drowned or gone missing while crossing the Mediterranean.


Creed II: Roadmap for a good reboot?

One of Hollywood's most hotly anticipated movies of the season hittheatres this week. Creed II is Michael B. Jordan's second outing as Adonis Creed, protg of Sylvester Stallone's Rocky Balboa. The Pop Panel tonight asks whether Hollywood's reboot mania has found a successful formula, writes producer Tarannum Kamlani.

Expectations were high for Creed II. And by both critical and commercial standards, it looks like the bar has been surpassed with this renewed franchise about the sweet science.

Creed, which came out in 2015, made superstars of actor Michael B. Jordan and director Ryan Coogler (he went on to direct a little movie called Black Panther).

Michael B. Jordan in a scene from 'Creed II.' (Frank Ockenfels/Metro Goldwyn Mayer Pictures/Warner Bros. Pictures via AP)

It scored big at the box office, taking in $173.6 million US on a $40 million budget and got a coveted New York Times Critic's Pick check mark.

Creed II has already beaten Creed's Thanksgiving preview box office takings, earning $3.7 million over part one's $1.4 million. It also scored a New York Times Critic's pick, with reviewer A.O. Scott calling it, "the only heroic Hollywood multi-sequel narrative worth caring about."

So what is this multi-sequel narrative doing right?

Both movies have won their raves for honouring the Rocky films of the 1970s and 80s without pandering to their cliches. Stallone's best instincts were at play in the first Creed, so much so that he was more deeply involved in part two, not only reprising his role but also co-writing the film.

Sylvester Stallone co-wrote and plays Rocky in 'Creed II.' (Barry Wetcher/Metro Goldwyn Mayer Pictures/Warner Bros. Pictures via AP)

The Creed movies build on a story beloved by fans for decades. The tale of Rocky Balboa, a scrappy working-class fighter from Philadelphia, is iconic, while the subsequent sequels are less and less so. But Rocky's relationships, especially his rivalry-turned-friendship with fellow fighter Apollo Creed, are perhaps why the Rocky movies became so successful.

That bond laid the foundation for the Creed movies, where Stallone's Rocky character becomes a mentor to Apollo's son Adonis, played by Jordan.

Creed II builds on a great tragedy in Adonis' life, the fight in Rocky IV that took his father's life. But it also follows the evolution of Adonis both as a fighter and as a man, exploring his relationships with Rocky and with his love interest, a musician named Bianca played by another rising talent, Tessa Thompson.

The relationship between boxer Adonis, left, and his mentor Rocky is a key element of 'Creed II.' (Barry Wetcher/Metro Goldwyn Mayer Pictures/Warner Bros. Pictures via AP)

The Creed movies aren't the first sequels or reboots to win with critics and audiences Mad Max Fury Road and some of the latest Star Wars movies come to mind. But with everything from Mary Poppins (also featuring one of its original stars, Dick Van Dyke) to Dumbo in the reboot pipeline, it seems time to take a closer look at why some reboots shine and others fizzle.

So this week on the Pop Panel, we'll do just that.

And while I know it may be too early for some of you, Christmas TV movie season is also upon us. You know the movies I mean, with the interchangeable and homogenous casts, the cliche-laden storylines and guaranteed happy endings. This year there will be more of them than ever. We ask why they remain so unchanging.

[What's your go-to Christmas movie? This one is mine.]

Ian Hanomansing is hosting the Pop Panel tonight. Joining him in The National's studio are Donnovan Bennett, host and writer at Sportsnet, as well as freelance writer Stephen Marche, and Ishani Nath, senior editor at Flare.com. I hope you'll join us!

- Tarannum Kamlani

  • WATCH: The Pop Panel tonight on The National on CBC Television and streamed online


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Questions in Paradise

Reporter Briar Stewart has been covering the aftermath of the fires in Paradise, Calif., and the search for the missing.

As we drove around the streets and cul de sacs of Paradise, Calif., it was terrifying to think about what it must have been like as fire roared through the community.

A search-and-rescue volunteer remarked to me that it was like a nuclear bomb had gone off in the city.

Online and on message boards set up at evacuation centres there were desperate pleas from relatives looking for loved ones.

Briar Stewart, left, speaks with 25-year-old Paradise resident Christina Taft. She lost her mother Victoria, who was partially blind, in the fire. (Chris Corday/CBC)

So many of those still missing are in their 80s and 90s, some described as having dementia or a disability. It's difficult to imagine what it must have been like for them those who didn't recognize the danger, or who were unable to leave on their own and were trapped.

The aftermath of the fire is bleak and depressing, and hundreds are still unaccounted for.

The properties where the missing lived are the priority for the search teams. As they pick through the rubble they are looking for bone fragments, knowing that in some cases even those may have been incinerated.

Searchers sifting through the rubble after fire tore through Paradise, Calif., are focused on what were living rooms and bedrooms, places where people were likely to be. There are hundreds of searchers looking for the missing, many of them volunteers. (Briar Stewart/CBC)

As the search continues, residents are also demanding answers from officials.

This town had been threatened by wildfires before, and people had even gone through mock evacuations to prepare for the worst.

So the residents of Paradise are asking why, when the worst happened, was there such little warning. Why weren't evacuation orders put in place earlier. And when they finally did get issued, why weren't they communicated to many of the residents.

- Briar Stewart

Watch the report on the California fires and the search for the missing from The National:

The ruins of Paradise: Inside the California fire zone | Dispatch

6 years ago
Duration 9:45
Nearly two weeks after California's deadliest wildfire began, more than 500 people are still unaccounted for and more than 80 have been confirmed dead so far a number that has been rising almost daily. CBC's Briar Stewart takes us to the devastated town of Paradise, where people are bracing for rains that could bring a new danger to the region.

A few words on ...

The search for an elusive otter with a penchant for koi.


Quote of the moment

"We hope to receive your forgiveness for our cultural misunderstandings."

- Domenico Dolce, co-founder of the D&G fashion brand, apologizing for a new online ad that has drawn accusations of racism for its depiction of a Chinese woman struggling to eat pasta and pizza with chopsticks.

The founders of Dolce & Gabbana - Domenico Dolce, left, and Stefano Gabbana - apologize in a video on Chinese social media, saying 'sorry' in Mandarin. The Italian fashion house has been in hot water for controversial video ads, and insulting remarks about China made on Instagram. (Ng Han Guan/Associated Press)

What The National is reading

  • Skripal poisoning: Police officer's family 'lost everything' because of Novichok (BBC)
  • Tories accuse Trudeau of bribing media with tax breaks (CBC)
  • New York gun buyers may need to submit social media history (Fox News)
  • Separatist rebels strom Chinese consulate in Pakistan (CBC)
  • Chinese banker sues Canada to halt tax probe, retract residency claim (South China Morning Post)
  • Canadian skiing great Erik Guay calls it quits (CBC)
  • Did Britpop cause Brexit? (Guardian)
  • All 45 Peanuts specials, ranked from worst to best (Vulture)

Today in history

Nov. 23, 2004: Moving Moose Jaw's Mac the Moose

The world's largest moose was built for size, not portability. Then 20 years later, the City of Moose Jaw constructed a new visitor information centre a kilometre down the Trans Canada from the old one, and Mac the Moose had to move as well. As this report indicates, it wasn't an easy task the 10 metre high ungulate weighed 9,000 kilograms and was falling apart. "If there's any wind at all he's likely to blow over, and then I guess we'd have the biggest roadkill in Canada," explains Wayne Gamble of Tourism Moose Jaw.

Moving Moose Jaw's Mac the Moose

20 years ago
Duration 1:51
A familiar figure in Moose Jaw, Sask. is due to move but transplanting him will be tough.

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