The Guardian (USA)

People rescued in Italian waters spark row between Italy and France

- Lorenzo Tondo in Palermo and Kim Willsher in Paris

The fate of hundreds of people rescued in the central Mediterran­ean by a charity vessel has sparked a diplomatic row between Italy and France, with the French government calling it “unacceptab­le” that Rome has refused to allow the ship, carrying 234 asylum seekers, to dock in an Italian port.

On Tuesday, the Ocean Viking rescue boat, operated by the European charity SOS Méditerran­ée under a Norwegian flag, began sailing towards France after Italy’s new far-right government refused to give it a safe port for more than two weeks.

The French government spokespers­on, Olivier Véran, told FranceInfo on Wednesday: “The boat is currently in Italian territoria­l waters. There are extremely clear European rules which have been accepted by the Italians who are, in fact, the first beneficiar­y of a European financial solidarity mechanism.”

Véran added that the Italian government’s declaratio­ns were “unacceptab­le”, as was its refusal to allow the boat to dock. “We still have a few hours of discussion­s and, in any case, we are still at that stage. Obviously no one will let this boat run any risk, especially for the people on board,” he added. “We are following the situation minute by minute.”

Over the weekend, in its first test of migration policy, Italy’s new prime minister, Giorgia Meloni, the leader of a party with neo-fascist origins who once said Rome should “repatriate migrants and sink the boats that rescued them”, enacted its controvers­ial anti-migration plan, which provides for the pushback of mostly male asylum seekers of adult age rescued in the central Mediterran­ean whom Italian authoritie­s do not deem qualified for internatio­nal protection. On Saturday, Italy’s new interior minister, Matteo Piantedosi, initially allowed Humanity 1, a rescue boat run by the German NGO SOS Humanity, to enter the port of Catania in Sicily with 179 passengers onboard. However, Italian authoritie­s began disembarki­ng only children and sick people: 144 passengers were moved to a reception centre while the rest, all males over the age of 18, were left onboard with Rome threatenin­g to push them back into internatio­nal waters.

On Sunday, it was the turn of another rescue boat, the Geo Barents, run by Médecins Sans Frontières and carrying 568 asylum seekers. Again, after a quick inspection on board, 217 people were left on the ship, with volunteers reporting people sleeping on the decks, as fever-inducing infections and scabies spread.

After a two-day standoff, all remaining asylum seekers aboard the two charity vessels were allowed to disembark due to their physical and psychologi­cal condition.

On Tuesday, after unsuccessf­ully waiting for permission to dock in Italy since late October, Ocean Viking appealed to France, requesting authorisat­ion to disembark its passengers.

Meloini said on Wednesday: “The people aboard the NGO vessels are migrants, not shipwrecke­d. We did not ask for the disembarka­tion of all the people aboard the vessels. That was the doctors’ decision after a second inspection on board, and we found that decision

bizarre.”

Sophie Beau, the director general of SOS Méditerran­ée, said: “The situation aboard the Ocean Viking has reached a critical stage. We are now confronted with very serious consequenc­es including the risk of loss of human life … after more than two weeks of being blocked at sea.”

The Ocean Viking is now sailing toward France and should reach internatio­nal waters off the French Mediterran­ean island of Corsica by Thursday.

Gilles Simeoni, the president of the executive council on Corsica, said he was “ready if necessary” to allow Ocean Viking into one of the island’s ports temporaril­y. He said the row between the French and Italian government­s was regrettabl­e and playing out “at the expense of the health, and perhaps the lives, of hundreds of people who are in a state of distress”.

“Our position is dictated by the duty of humanity, by the emergency. We cannot, when there are people suffering and in absolute distress a few dozen kilometres from the Corsican coast, look the other way,” Simeoni said.

A French interior ministry source cited by BFMTV criticised the Italian authoritie­s’ “unacceptab­le behaviour” that they said was “contrary to marine law as well as the spirit of European solidarity”.

On Wednesday, Piantedosi said its government “will not accept lessons on human rights”.

Meanwhile, Meloni thanked France for “sharing the responsibi­lity of the migratory emergency, which up to now has been on the back of Italy and a few other states”.

“The immigratio­n emergency is a European issue,” she said, “and it should be addressed as such.”

 ?? Anadolu Agency/Getty ?? The Ocean Viking, operated by the charity SOS Méditerran­ée, rescued the asylum seekers in the central Mediterran­ean. Photograph:
Anadolu Agency/Getty The Ocean Viking, operated by the charity SOS Méditerran­ée, rescued the asylum seekers in the central Mediterran­ean. Photograph:

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