The Malta Independent 5 May 2024, Sunday
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Syracuse opens door for stranded migrants, Rome closes it – Sea-Watch

Saturday, 26 January 2019, 14:05 Last update: about 6 years ago

Seven days after the rescue of 47 shipwrecked off the Libyan coast, the last remaining rescue ship in the central Mediterranean Sea now is blocked off the coast of Sicily despite Syracuse offering a port of safety, the NGO Sea-Watch said in a statement today.

On Thursday the mayor of Syracuse, Francesco Italia, had declared the city's port open, and asked the responsible authorities to allow the entry of the Sea-Watch 3. However the government currently prohibits the people from leaving the ship.

Without a safe port for the exhausted shipwrecked and awaiting a Mediterranean cyclone with waves of more than seven meters, Sea-Watch on Thursday sought shelter to the east of the Sicilian coast.

After receiving an invitation by the mayor of Syracuse, the captain of the ship asked for permission to enter the port of the city. However once in proximity to the port, Sea-Watch was denied entry, the NGO said.

The ship therefore remains stuck at anchor 1.4 miles from the port of Syracuse without being able to allow due assistance on land to vulnerable people fleeing Libya and tried by days on the high seas, it added.

Sea-Watch asks for an end to this odyssey: we strongly ask for the immediate disembarkation of all shipwrecked people.

Italy pressured the Netherlands on Friday to accept 47 migrants, including eight unaccompanied minors, who have spent seven days at sea aboard a humanitarian rescue ship that has been allowed to enter Italian territorial waters due to bad weather conditions.

The German aid group Sea-Watch tweeted that it has received no response to multiple requests for the Dutch-flagged Sea Watch-3 vessel carrying people rescued off Libya on Saturday to access a port. The boat was permitted to enter Italian waters Friday because of deteriorating weather conditions, and the Italian coast guard said it just off Syracuse, Sicily, flanked by coast guard and financial police boats.

Italy and Malta, the closest EU nations, have both refused to allow entry to rescue vessels operated by humanitarian groups in what they say is a bid to discourage smuggler boats from departing Libya by diminishing the prospect of rescue.

Italian Interior Minister Matteo Salvini told reporters in Rome that he sent a letter to the government in the Netherlands officially requesting that they organize landings for the migrants "aboard this vessel that waves a Dutch flag."

Dutch Migration Minister Mark Harbers said that without the prospect of such a comprehensive solution to how to process migrants rescued at sea that the Netherlands "will not take part in ad-hoc measures." He added that the ship flying the Dutch flag doesn't oblige the Netherlands to take action.

European Commission President Jean Claude Juncker's spokesman said that the commission is in touch with member states, and was watching the events closely.

"Our position is clear: The safety of the people on board must be our first concern and priority. What is urgently needed in the Mediterranean are predictable arrangements to ensure disembarkations of rescued persons can take place safely," spokesman Margaritis Schinas said.

A similar impasse was resolved last month when Malta allowed two to disembark 49 migrants two NGO-operated vessels, including Sea-Watch 3, after the EU brokered a deal to distribute the migrants among eight EU nations.

UNICEF's spokesman in Italy, Andrea Iacomini, lamented the frequency of such stand offs.

"Is it possible that Europe enters into a sort of humanitarian paralysis every three days for dozens of human beings, including children, without coming up with a structural and shared solution," Iacomini said. "I hope that European governments find a speedy agreement for a humanitarian solution that offers a safe port to the eight unaccompanied minors on the Sea-Watch. A child is a child, not a hostage."

 

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