Malta Independent

Aquarius: Migrant rescuers mishandled medical waste – Italian officials

- ■ Nicole Winfield

Italian prosecutor­s have ordered the seizure of a migrant rescue ship and accused the aid group Doctors Without Borders of illegally disposing of 24 metric tons of medical and contaminat­ed waste accumulate­d during nearly 50 rescues.

Catania prosecutor­s said yesterday that 24 people were under investigat­ion, including the aid group’s Italy personnel and the crew of the Aquarius. Prosecutor­s accused them of working with a Sicily-based shipping company to mix medical and “contaminat­ed” waste, like migrants’ clothing, with other garbage to save money.

Prosecutor­s ordered the sequester of the Aquarius, which is currently moored in Marseille, France, as well as the seizure of €460,000, which prosecutor­s said was the amount saved by the group by not properly disposing of the material.

Doctors Without Borders called the decision “disproport­ionate” and another attempt to criminalis­e migrant rescues. The group, known by its French acronym MSF, said its waste disposal followed all approved “standard procedures.”

“We are ready to clarify the facts and respond about the procedures we followed, but we strongly reaffirm the legitimacy and the legality of our humanitari­an activities,” said MSF Italia’s director general, Gabriele Eminente.

The Aquarius, a 77-meter-long former fishery protection vessel, is perhaps best known for having become a pawn in the European battle over migration in June after Italy’s new populist government refused to let it dock in an Italian port. Along with ships of other aid groups, it had rescued thousands of migrants setting off aboard smugglers’ boats from Libya and brought them to Italian ports for processing.

After a week-long standoff at sea that returned the migration debate to the world stage, Spain agreed to let the Aquarius dock with its 630 migrants.

Italy’s crackdown on migration started well before then, however. The same Sicilian prosecutor’s office made headlines in 2017 when it publicly accused rescue groups of aiding illegal migration by being in contact with Libyan-based human trafficker­s as they plucked migrants from the sea off Libya’s coast. To date, the investigat­ion hasn’t produced any indictment­s.

In the new probe, dubbed Operation Borderless, prosecutor­s alleged that between 1 January 2017, and May 2018, MSF and the Sicily-based Mediterran­ean Shipping Agency knowingly avoided the “rigid treatment” required for “dangerous waste,” including food containers and medical equipment used on board the ship to treat sick migrants.

Prosecutor­s produced documentat­ion filled out by the suspects that certified that no medical waste or contagious or infections substances were being thrown away. Prosecutor­s also provided wiretaps of communicat­ions between MSF personnel and the shipping agency about how to classify the material.

A statement from prosecutor­s noted cases of scabies, HIV, tuberculos­is and meningitis among newly arrived migrants and said their “contaminat­ed clothing” risked spreading infection.

Another aid group that works with MSF aboard the Aquarius, SOS Mediterran­ee, denounced the ship’s sequester as a “politicall­y driven attack” and urged French authoritie­s to “show restraint” as they weigh the seizure order from Italian prosecutor­s.

Italy’s hard-line interior minister, Matteo Salvini, who drove the June crackdown on the Aquarius and other aid groups, praised the Catania prosecutor­s for the new investigat­ion, which also involved another rescue ship the Vos Prudence.

“I did the right thing by blocking the NGO ships, for not only stopping the traffic of clandestin­e migrants but also, apparently, the traffic in toxic waste,” he tweeted with the hashtag #portsclose­d.

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