Kuwait Times

EU faces fresh standoff over migrant boat

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PARIS: European countries faced pressure yesterday to resolve a fresh standoff with the operators of the migrant rescue ship Aquarius which is stranded for the second time in the Mediterran­ean carrying 141 people. France said it was in touch with other EU nations to “rapidly” find a port where the Aquarius could dock after it was refused entry by Italy and Malta, the two countries closest to its current location. The Aquarius, which was left stranded with 630 migrants on board in June after being turned away by Rome and Valletta, resumed rescue operations off the Libyan coast last week.

In a statement late on Monday, French President Emmanuel Macron’s office voiced disapprova­l of Italy’s “very tough political stance” milder language than two months ago when he accused the populist government of “cynicism and irresponsi­bility”. The 141 migrants on board the Aquarius were picked up on Friday in two separate operations and are in a stable condition, the French charity that operates the Aquarius, SOS Mediterran­ee, said. In the first rescue, 25 people were plucked from a wooden boat bobbing on the seas off the Libyan coast, while another 116 were rescued from another larger vessel later in the day.

The second boat was overloaded and more than half of the passengers were unaccompan­ied children, mostly from Somalia and Eritrea. They had no food or water supplies at the time of their rescue, SOS Mediterran­ee said. “We’re asking all

European countries to find a solution. We’re asking them to be responsibl­e and find a safe port in the Mediterran­ean,” Sophie Beau, head of charity, told AFP on Monday. Tove Ernst, a spokesman for the European Commission, said Monday that it was in contact with “a number of member states” to find a “swift resolution” to the standoff.

No volunteers

Since June, Italy’s new far-right Interior Minister Matteo Salvini has regularly turned away rescue ships operated by foreign NGOs, accusing them of playing into the hands of people smugglers. On Saturday, he said the Aquarius would “never see an Italian port” again, accusing it of encouragin­g smugglers and migrants to take to the water in the knowledge that they will be rescued. The Italian coast guard continues to rescue migrants, however. Malta’s government defended its decision to turn away the Aquarius, saying it was “neither the coordinati­ng nor the competent authority for such a rescue” and had “no legal obligation” to provide a place of safety. The government of Gibraltar also announced late Monday that the ship would no longer be allowed to operate under its maritime flag after being registered on the British overseas territory in 2009.

The increasing­ly hostile stance reflects hardening public opinion towards migrants in Europe following the arrival of hundreds of thousands of people fleeing war or poverty in Africa and the Middle East. For years, Italy pleaded with its EU partners for help with a massive influx of arrivals that has seen 700,000 people land in the country since 2013. The new Italian policy of turning back charity boats sparked a furious row among EU members in June, which was resolved when Spain, under a new Socialist government, offered to take in the Aquarius passengers. A Spanish government source told AFP on Monday that the country did not intend to repeat the gesture by allowing the Aquarius to dock in Valencia, saying that “it is not the safest port” for the ship. France’s Macron was criticized by leftwing opponents in June for failing to offer a safe haven in France-it was the next closest country to the boat after Italy and Malta. Local leaders on the French island of Corsica have offered to welcome the migrants, as has the port of Sete on the mainland-but the invitation­s would need to be approved by the government in Paris.

“If the closest ports are closed, then others that are closer need to open,” the head of the Corsican local assembly, Jean-Guy Talamoni, told the BFM channel yesterday. “We left Italy alone to deal with the problem, but it’s a problem for the whole of Europe,” Talamoni added. France took in 78 of the migrants on board the Aquarius in June after they landed in Spain. French public opinion was against accepting the Aquarius during the first crisis and the rightwing Republican­s party and far-right National Rally both argued yesterday against allowing the boat to dock. A spokesman for the National Rally suggested the ship should head for a port in Tunisia.

 ?? —AFP ?? MARSEILLE: The rescue ship Aquarius, chartered by French aid group SOS Mediterran­ee and Doctors Without Borders (MSF), leaves the harbor of Marseille, southeaste­rn France after having been docked for a month for maintenanc­e work.
—AFP MARSEILLE: The rescue ship Aquarius, chartered by French aid group SOS Mediterran­ee and Doctors Without Borders (MSF), leaves the harbor of Marseille, southeaste­rn France after having been docked for a month for maintenanc­e work.

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