Bangkok Post

Rescue ship issues emergency amid chaos onboard

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>>VALLETTA: After suicide attempts, fights erupting on board, and migrants jumping into the sea, charity SOS Mediterran­ee launched an emergency alert on Friday, demanding to be allowed to immediatel­y disembark at a safe port.

The humanitari­an group, whose vessel the Ocean Viking has been at sea for over a week with 180 migrants aboard, said it could no longer guarantee the safety of the migrants or crew and called a state of emergency in an unpreceden­ted step.

The boat, which has been in limbo in the Mediterran­ean south of Sicily, has been waiting for over a week for permission from Italy or Malta to offload the migrants at a safe port.

Tensions have risen in the past week, as witnessed by an AFP reporter aboard the boat, as migrants have become increasing­ly desperate to reach land. Others have become distraught not being able to telephone their families to let them know they were safe.

A member of the crew, Ludovic, told AFP he had never witnessed such violence on board a rescue vessel, after a spate of fights between migrants and threats of suicide.

“I don’t feel safe,” Ludovic said. “We have to find a port now, it’s a question of safety.”

SOS Mediterran­ee said in a statement it was not safe to keep migrants languishin­g on a boat after they had “endured a near-death experience on an unseaworth­y dinghy in distress.”

The migrants, which include Pakistanis, North Africans, Eritreans,

Nigerians and others, were picked up after fleeing Libya in four separate rescues by the Ocean Viking on June 25 and 30, after setting sail from Marseille on June 22.

The migrants include 25 minors, most of whom are unaccompan­ied by adults, and two women, one of whom is pregnant.

“After seven requests for a Place of Safety to the relevant maritime authoritie­s within the past week and six suicide attempts by survivors within 24 hours, the Ocean Viking has declared a State of Emergency...” the group wrote.

At times, all the members of the SOS Mediterran­ee rescue team have been on deck in order to calm tense situations. Now, some of the threats are being directed at the rescuers themselves.

On Thursday, two migrants threw themselves into the Mediterran­ean but were rescued.

The charity group said it had received a negative response from Italy and Malta after its first request for a port, and no replies to its six subsequent requests.

Nicholas Romaniuk, in charge of rescue operations on board, said there was no “legal or moral” reason to keep the migrants on board.

“It’s Malta who alerted us and gave us the position of one of the boats in distress and now they don’t answer the phone,” Mr Romaniuk said.

More than 100,000 migrants tried to cross the Mediterran­ean last year with more than 1,200 dying in the attempt, according to the Internatio­nal Organizati­on for Migration.

 ??  ?? GOING OVERBOARD: One of the 47 migrants rescued by members of French NGO SOS Mediterran­ee is helped by rescuers late last month.
GOING OVERBOARD: One of the 47 migrants rescued by members of French NGO SOS Mediterran­ee is helped by rescuers late last month.

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