MSF refuses to sign on to new migrant rescue rules
ROME: Medical charity Doctors Without Borders ( MSF) refused Monday to sign a code of conduct on migrant- saving operations in the Mediterranean, while others including Save the Children approved the new rules.
“There were two sticking points that prevented us from signing the code,” said Tommaso Fabbri, head of MSF’s Italy mission, after the charity took part in a meeting in Rome between the interior ministry and non- governmental organisations.
One was the obligation for rescue vessels to operate with an Italian police official on board, and the other was the ban on moving rescued migrants from one aid vessel to another at sea, which complicated missions, he said.
“We are doctors, not policemen,” Fabbri told AFP.
“We will continue to carry out rescue operations without changing anything,” he said, but added the organisation was ‘open to controls’ by the Italian coastguard in the name of transparency.
The code, created to address the biggest migrant phenomenon in Europe since World War II, lays down 13 rules Rome insists must be followed to prevent aid groups rescuing migrants from acting as a magnet for human traffickers.
But the rules have been widely criticised by the NGOs as making it more difficult for them to save the lives of those attempting the perilous crossing from the shores of crisis-hit Libya to Europe.
The interior ministry said those who “refuse to agree and sign are excluded from the system of sea rescues”. The German NGO Jugend Rettet, a privately-funded aid organisation which has been carrying out rescue operations in the central Mediterranean, also refused to sign. — AFP