Malta Independent

Dutch inspector visits impounded Sea-Watch migrant rescue vessel

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A Dutch inspector has visited an NGO migrant rescue vessel that has been impounded by the Maltese authoritie­s. The vessel, operated by German NGO Sea Watch, is registered under the Dutch flag.

This is the second migrant rescue vessel to be impounded by the Maltese authoritie­s, along with the MV Lifeline, which is operated by another German NGO – Mission Lifeline.

Following that incident, the Maltese government said it would not be allowing NGOs to sail in and out of its harbours until it had checked whether any internatio­nal laws were being broken. It transpired that the Lifeline was registered as a pleasure yacht in the Netherland­s. Its captain has been charged with irregular registrati­on of the vessel.

“Malta needs to ascertain that operations being conducted by entities using its port services and operating within the area of Maltese responsibi­lity are in accordance with national and internatio­nal rules,” the government had said in a statement.

DutchNews.nl has reported that the inspector will be visiting the vessel, the Sea-Watch 3, to investigat­e if it had broken any rules and whether it is staying in its search and rescue area.

On Tuesday Sea-Watch Internatio­nal claimed that their vessel had been detained in Malta, without any legal grounds by authoritie­s, while people were dying at sea.

“Since the Sea-Watch 3 is not registered in the sport boat register, as is the case for Lifeline and Seefuchs, but is listed in the royal shipping register as a Dutch seagoing vessel, fully entitled to fly the Dutch flag, the lack of permission to sail from Malta turns out not to be a registrati­on issue, but a political campaign to stop civil rescue at sea,” a statement on the NGO’s website read.

Sea Watch captain Pia Klemp said: “While we are hindered from leaving port, people are drowning. Any further death at sea is on account of those preventing rescue from taking place. Saving lives at sea is non-negotiable.”

On Wednesday, the NGO said that the Maltese authoritie­s had also barred its spotter plane from taking off.

A government spokespers­on later said that Malta’s search and rescue authority had not requested any surveillan­ce missions by third parties to be conducted within its SRR and FIR.

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