Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

More than 60 migrants aboard a dinghy were rescued by a Spanish aid boat.

Migrants overjoyed after being pulled from dinghy

- By Renata Brito and Frances D’Emilio

ABOARD THE OPEN ARMS IN THE MEDITERRAN­EAN SEA — The full moon was the only light as a terrified 9-year-old boy from Central African Republic climbed into a rubber dinghy held together with duct tape, risking death in the dark waters off Libya along with his parents and 57 other trafficked migrants.

After a long night on the Mediterran­ean Sea, a Spanish rescue boat spotted them on the horizon after dawn.

“People were screaming, I was afraid,” said the boy, Krisley Dokouada. “But after seeing the rescue boat, I knew there was no more danger.”

Their savior Saturday was the Open Arms, which became the third rescue ship run by humanitari­an aid groups to draw the ire of Italy’s anti-migrant interior minister, Matteo Salvini. He has vowed that Italy’s new populist government will no longer allow such rescue boats to dock in Italy, which has taken in hundreds of thousands of migrants rescued at sea in the past few years.

By nightfall Saturday, Spain agreed to let the Open Arms dock in Barcelona, where the humanitari­an aid group which operates the vessel, Proactiva Open Arms, is based, the Spanish government said.

The Open Arms and its companion ship, the Astral, probably will need four days to reach Barcelona, said the Astral’s captain, Riccardo Gatti.

Also on Saturday, in an unrelated rescue much further west of where the Open Arms rescue took place, Spanish authoritie­s reported saving 63 migrants trying to reach the country’s southern coast from North Africa.

While European politician­s bickered about where the migrants should go, those rescued by the Open Arms were jubilant — jumping, chanting and hugging rescuers.

Krisley’s tensions melted when he was allowed to sit for a few minutes in the captain’s seat. With sparkling eyes, the only child among the migrants smiled after the rescue crew called him “captain.”

For months, his family had lived in Libya, while they awaited their chance to make the Mediterran­ean crossing. His mother, Judith Dokouada, said she never left the shelter for fear of being kidnapped or sold as a slave.

“There is war at home. They kill people, they beat people, they rape women, they kill boys,” said Dokouada, 32. “We don’t have peace.”

 ?? Olmo Calvo The Associated Press ?? Migrants aboard a rubber dinghy off the Libyan coast on Saturday receive help from the Open Arms aid boat.
Olmo Calvo The Associated Press Migrants aboard a rubber dinghy off the Libyan coast on Saturday receive help from the Open Arms aid boat.

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