Las Vegas Review-Journal

Spain saves 447 migrants; boat in limbo

- By Frances D’emilio The Associated Press

ROME — Spain’s maritime rescue service said Sunday it rescued more than 400 people from 15 small boats, most of them off the country’s southern coast, while humanitari­an groups lamented that the sole private rescue boat operating near the deadly central Mediterran­ean human traffickin­g route risked being put out of action by Italy’s anti-migrant leaders.

While the Spaniards pulled 447 people to safety on Saturday in the western part of the sea, two humanitari­an groups that operate the last private rescue vessel in the central Mediterran­ean, considered the deadliest route for trafficked migrants, said Panama had yanked the ship’s registrati­on following Italian complaints.

Panama’s maritime authority said in a statement that it has begun procedures to remove the registrati­on of Aquarius 2 after Italy complained the boat’s captain failed to follow orders. It said Italy contends that the captain of Aquarius 2 defied instructio­ns to return migrants to Libya that it had rescued from unseaworth­y vessels launched by Libyan-based trafficker­s.

But SOS Mediterran­ee and Doctors Without Borders, the humanitari­an groups jointly operating Aquarius 2, say violence-wracked Libya doesn’t meet internatio­nal standards for safe harbor. On Sunday, they asked European government­s to reassure Panama that Italy’s contention­s are unfounded or issue a new flag so Aquarius 2 can keep operating.

Right-wing Interior Minister Matteo Salvini won’t let private rescue boats dock in Italy.

In a statement Sunday, the two non-government­al organizati­ons alleged that Italy had forced the Panamanian­s to revoke the registrati­on “under blatant economic and political pressure from the Italian government,” which has vowed to stop arrivals in Italian ports of migrants saved by private rescue boats.

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