On Friday, Premier Giorgia Meloni lambasted France’s “aggressive” response amidst the huge diplomatic row over NGO-run search-and-rescue ship the Ocean Viking.

“When there is talk of retaliation in EU dynamics, something is not working,” Meloni told a press conference.

“I was struck by the aggressive, incomprehensible, unjustifiable reaction of the French government.”

Paris allowed the Ocean Viking, which is run by French NGO SOS Méditerranée, to dock in Toulon on Friday, with 230 asylum seekers on board, after Rome ignored the ship’s appeals to be assigned a port of safety for weeks.

Now, French Interior Minister Gérald Darmanin announced that Paris has suspended plans to take in the 3,500 refugees currently in Italy, calling on “all the participants” in the EU’s migrant-relocation mechanism to adopt similar measures.

Darmanin called on “Germany in particular” to suspend the relocation of asylum seekers from Italy.

“The request to isolate Italy betrays a curious EU dynamic,” Meloni said.

“I hope this does not happen, it would not be smart.

“The issue today is how the EU should deal with this matter.

“It could choose to isolate Italy. I think it would be better to isolate the traffickers.

“You can decide to isolate Italy but it is not the solution.I think it’s worth putting two and two together,” Meloni added.

“The Ocean Viking NGO ship that docks in France today is the first NGO ship to have ever docked in France, and it has 230 migrants.

“This generated a very tough reaction with respect to Italy, which has allowed almost 90,000 migrants to enter.

“What makes me angry? That Italy has to be the only (country to provide a) disembarkation port.

“This is not written in any agreement”.

NGO run migrant rescue ship, the SOS Méditerranée. (Photo: ANSA)

The French Secretary of State for EU Affairs Laurence Bonne told France Info that the government's trust of Rome had broken down following the row.

“The current Italian government has not respected the mechanism which it had committed to,” Bonne said.

“There was a unilateral decision that put lives in danger and that, moreover, does not comply with international law.”

The 230 migrants rescued by the SOS Méditerranée disembarked at Toulon in France last week, however they are not on French territory but in an international “waiting area”, French Interior Ministry spokeswoman Camille Chaize said on Friday.

French rightwing groups havealready begun flocking to Toulon to protest the arrival of the migrants.