Oman Daily Observer

Furore over Mediterran­ean migrant rescues, deaths

-

CATANIA, Italy: Rescuers in the Mediterran­ean raced on Friday to the aid of more than 20 migrant dinghies in distress as the debate in Italy over privately-funded aid ships intensifie­d and the death toll at sea ticked steadily upwards.

“There are over 20 boats in difficulty off Libya and an already tense situation has worsened with people in the water,” said Mathilde Auvillain, communicat­or officer for SOS Mediterran­ee.

Charities Doctors Without Borders (MSF) and Save the Children were taking part in a senate meeting in a bid to clear the air after weeks of speculatio­n over whether some of the rescue vessels may have links to trafficker­s in Libya.

NGOs have fiercely denied claims of collusion with smugglers made by Sicilian prosecutor Carmelo Zuccaro, who has suggested they are worsening Europe’s worst migrant crisis since World War II — but also admitted he has no proof.

“We are under political attack, probably because we are giving a voice to those we save at sea, and pointing the finger at Europe for its failure to respond” to the crisis, said MSF search and rescue coordinato­r Michele Trainiti.

The MFS boat Vos Prudence disembarke­d six bodies recovered from the Mediterran­ean in the port of Catania on Friday morning, five of whom were young women of African origin aged between 16 and 35.

“We think they were in the water for around a week, we can’t be more specific because of the advanced state of decomposit­ion of the bodies,” MSF nurse Elena Zandanel, 33, said.

The furore has been stoked by the populist Five Star Movement and antiimmigr­ant Northern League, whose leader Matteo Salvini said this week that the rescues were little more than “a financial and commercial operation”.

Zuccaro appealed on Wednesday for more resources to expand his investigat­ion, including intercepti­ng the satellite calls made by trafficker­s, saying European Border Agency Frontex had intelligen­ce of contact between NGOs and smugglers.

A Frontex spokespers­on in Warsaw said Frontex had never accused the NGOs. “They want more resources, the resources should be used to save those risking their lives at sea,” said Trainiti.

“Frontex has said there is no proof linking us to trafficker­s, as has (antismuggl­ing operation) EU Navfor med and the (Sicilian) prosecutor of Siracusa”, he said.

He also rubbished Zuccaro’s suggestion the NGO boats were intervenin­g to rescue people before they needed help.

“There’s never a ‘too soon’ when you speak of rescues. According to the rules of the sea, as soon as one of these dinghies leaves land it is a vessel in distress, because it has over 10 times the number of people it could legally carry.

“It doesn’t need to send a distress signal, it doesn’t need to call for help, the law of the sea says it is a boat that needs assistance, full stop”.

The flimsy dinghies used by trafficker­s are launched from the North African coast with an average of 122 passengers crammed aboard.

More than 1,000 people have died or are missing feared drowned on the central Mediterran­ean crossing so far this year.

The debate — which saw Prime Minister Paolo Gentiloni wade on Thursday to hail the NGOs — is distractin­g from the real issue, the chaotic situation in Libya which is forcing ever larger numbers of people to flee across the sea, Trainiti said.

“We are very worried the situation will get worse with the summer and good weather. The situation in Libya becomes more critical by the day, there are stories of prolonged violence, torture and rape, including the rape of entire families”.

Giancarlo Perego, director of the Migrantes foundation, said it was “right that prosecutor­s and the judiciary be vigilant and take note of the current situation in the Mediterran­ean, so that migrants are not victims twice over”.

“But indistinct political fire on the nine NGOs operating in the Mediterran­ean to save lives using the resources of banking and private foundation­s, of civil society, is hypocritic­al and shameful.”

 ?? — AFP ?? The bodies of six migrants arrive at the port of Catania a day after being found at sea by NGO Medecins Sans Frontieres (MSF) as part of a rescue operation of migrants and refugees off the Libyan coasts on Friday.
— AFP The bodies of six migrants arrive at the port of Catania a day after being found at sea by NGO Medecins Sans Frontieres (MSF) as part of a rescue operation of migrants and refugees off the Libyan coasts on Friday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Oman