Oman Daily Observer

Italy, Malta keep migrant vessel in limbo

UNCERTAINT­Y: The vessel is 100 nautical miles off the Libyan coast as the NGO attempted a rescue operation

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ROME: A Spanish vessel with three Libyan migrants aboard was kept in internatio­nal waters on Tuesday after Italy and Malta refused to let it to dock.

The three aboard the ship Golfo Azzurro, chartered by Spain’s Proactiva Open Arms NGO and rescued on Sunday, were in limbo, illustrati­ng policy confusion a week after Rome introduced a controvers­ial code of conduct for charity boats rescuing migrants in the Mediterran­ean.

A Proactiva spokesman said the vessel was some 100 nautical miles (180 kilometres) off the Libyan coast as the NGO attempted a rescue operation normally coordinate­d with the Italian coast guard.

When the Golfo Azzurro approached the Italian island of Lampedusa, the closest to the Libyan coast, Italian authoritie­s denied it passage.

Proactiva’s mission head Gerard Canals said that Malta had said Italy was responsibl­e for the rescue and should take the migrants.

“The rescue on Sunday happened under the coordinati­on of the Italian MRCC (coastguard­s headquarte­rs) in Rome but in the Maltese SAR (search and rescue zone).

“We asked to disembark in Lampedusa because it was closer but the Italian authoritie­s told us to see with Malta.

“We cannot take them back to Libya because it’s against maritime law” with Libya not considered as a safe port “so we have to take them to a European port.”

Proactiva is one of four NGOs which have signed up to the code — the group formally did so Tuesday at the Italian interior ministry — whereas five counterpar­ts operating search-and-rescue activities off Libya have rejected the new rules.

Having been denied entry to Italy and Malta to change crew and load supplies, the Golfo Azzurro was stuck between Malta and Sicily midday on Tuesday.

Italian authoritie­s last Saturday did allow 127 migrants to disembark on Lampedusa after their rescue by Prudence, a vessel chartered by Doctors without Borders (MSF), which has not signed up to the new code. Also on Tuesday, C-Star, a vessel chartered by a group of European far-right activists opposed to migrants, was still moored off the Tunisian coast as fishermen and a powerful union prevented them from loading supplies.

Two weeks ago, Turkish Cypriot authoritie­s released the C-Star’s captain and crew after detaining them over accusation­s of using false documentat­ion.

The activists’ “Defend Europe” scheme was launched by antiimmigr­ation campaigner­s from France, Italy and Germany who raised 170,000 euros ($200,000) via crowd-funding to hire the vessel.

In a separate developmen­t, UN’s new envoy to Libya on Tuesday endorsed an Italy drive to strengthen the Libyan coastguard to ensure boatloads of migrants are intercepte­d before reaching internatio­nal waters.

Human rights campaigner­s fear the approach could place thousands of people with a right to asylum at serious risk.

 ?? — AFP ?? Italy’s Foreign Minister Angelino Alfano (R) at a press conference with Ghassan Salame, Special Representa­tive to the Secretary General of the United Nations for Libya, in Rome on Tuesday.
— AFP Italy’s Foreign Minister Angelino Alfano (R) at a press conference with Ghassan Salame, Special Representa­tive to the Secretary General of the United Nations for Libya, in Rome on Tuesday.
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