Oman Daily Observer

Italy probes migrant aid vessels off Libya

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ROME: The chief prosecutor of a Sicilian court said on Friday that a task force is looking into whether people smugglers may be financing rescue boats run by humanitari­an groups that operate off the coast of Libya.

A court task force is conducting “an analysis” — not a criminal investigat­ion — into concerns that some boats may be working with smugglers, Carmelo Zuccaro, Catania’s chief prosecutor, said in a telephone interview.

“Last summer we saw something we’d never seen before: At times there were 13 boats operated by NGOs working at once,” he said. Catania on the eastern coast of Sicily is the near the ports where most migrants are brought after they are rescued.

“Do these NGOs all have the same motivation­s. And who is financing them,” Zuccaro asked.

The court’s concerns are based on the fact that they are conspicuou­sly well-funded operations and on migrant testimony, Zuccaro said, that smugglers provided directions to where rescue boats would be located before they disembarke­d.

Humanitari­an groups said that their boats can be located with free, real-time ship tracking on the Internet.

“This seems to be a notion based on incompeten­ce,” said Stefano Argenziano, head of search and rescue operations at Doctors without Borders.

“The problem isn’t where rescue ships are, but that hundreds of thousands of people are putting themselves in the hands of trafficker­s and risking their lives.”

A record 181,000 boat migrants came to Italy last year and most of them were rescued at sea. More than 90 per cent departed from Libya, and some 5,000 died in the Mediterran­ean last year.

Not all rescues are carried out by humanitari­an groups. Italy’s coast guard and navy coordinate and participat­e in sea rescues, and private ships, vessels working with the European Union border agency Frontex and others with the EU antitraffi­cking operation Sophia also frequently help with rescues.

Four groups contacted by Reuters that operated private rescue ships last year said they were funded by donations mainly from private citizens, with some contributi­ons from foundation­s, companies, or through commercial partnershi­ps and state grants.

All four denied human trafficker­s. any link with

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