The Guardian (USA)

Libya coastguard accused of hampering attempt to save more than 170 people

- Lisa O'Carroll in Brussels

An NGO performing search and rescue missions in the Mediterran­ean has accused the Libyan coastguard of hampering an attempt to save more than 170 people making the perilous journey across the sea to Europe.

In a statement, Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) said its ship had come to the rescue of two boats in internatio­nal waters on Saturday: a small fibreglass boat carrying 28 people and a doubledeck wooden vessel with 143 people onboard, which appeared to be in distress.

The organisati­on said that as it approached the larger boat, the Libyan coastguard (LCG) also came near and “performed dangerous manoeuvres” that put the people onboard, mostly Syrian refugees, at even greater risk.

In a video taken by crew on a support aircraft operated by the maritime rescue NGOSea-Watch, a patrol vessel moves into position between two rigid dinghies operated by MSF, one of which has already started taking people onboard. The positionin­g makes it impossible for the second dinghy to move towards the vessel in distress.

Speaking in a video posted on X, an MSF official said the Libyan patrol vessel had “started to perform dangerous manoeuvres, blocking the RIBs [rigid inflatable boats]”.

A man on the aircraft footage is heard saying: “They are trying to intimidate the second RIB.” A woman’s voice on the plane is heard saying: “What they are doing is, like, really, really, really dangerous.”

Juan Matías Gil, the head of the MSF’s search and rescue mission in Rome, said the Libyan coastguard had attempted to tow away one of the dinghies. “We were never going to allow this. We [the ship Geo Barents] are running under the Norwegian flag so the boat is Norwegian territory in internatio­nal water. We don’t know where we would have ended up if they had managed to board our boat,” he said.

Gil said the interferen­ce with its mission lasted “for around two hours” despite communicat­ing in English and Arabic with the Libyan coastguard, which under internatio­nal law is obliged to rescue anyone in distress. “It was only after tense negotiatio­ns and calls to the Norwegian and the Italian and Libyan authoritie­s did they finally leave but not before making further threats towards us,” MSF said.

The people onboard the ships were “mostly from Syria” and included a number of children under 13 and a number of unaccompan­ied minors, Gil added.

The incident came after survivors said as many as 60 people had died last week in the Mediterran­ean after setting out from Zawiya on the Libyan coast. The 25 survivors said their dinghy’s engine had broken down after three days, leaving the group adrift for days before being rescued by another humanitari­an group, SOS Méditerran­ée.

Improved weather has prompted an increase in the number of people being smuggled across the Mediterran­ean in dangerousl­y ill-suited vessels.

Later on Saturday, with the assistance of the maritime rescue coordinati­on centre in Libya and the Italian authoritie­s, MSF recused 75 people from an overcrowde­d fibreglass boat that had capsized, 45 of whom had fallen into the water.

According to the latest data from Frontex, the EU border agency, 4,315 people made the crossing from north Africa to the EU across the Mediterran­ean in January and February, with an increase in numbers expected in the coming weeks.

The Internatio­nal Organizati­on for Migration said last week the Mediterran­ean continued to be the most dangerous route for migrants and refugees with more than 3,000 deaths and disappeara­nces in 2023 and 300 so far this year.

The EU, which provides financial support to the Libyan coastguard for training and for vessels, said all authoritie­s had acted in compliance with internatio­nal law.

A spokespers­on for the European Commission said: “We are not able to control the actions by individual­s. When it comes to search and rescue it is clear that search and rescue is an internatio­nal obligation for everyone and internatio­nal maritime law is very clear. All actions that put people’s lives at risk must be avoided at all times.”

Libyan representa­tives in Brussels have been contacted for comment.

 ?? ?? Still from video footage of the incident captured by a Sea-Watch plane. Photograph: Sea-Watch/Karoline Sobel
Still from video footage of the incident captured by a Sea-Watch plane. Photograph: Sea-Watch/Karoline Sobel

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States