BFF-06 Spanish ship returns home after dramatic migrant rescue

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ZCZC

BFF-06

EUROPE-MIGRANTS-SPAIN

Spanish ship returns home after dramatic migrant rescue

PALMA, Spain, July 22, 2018 (BSS/AFP) – Two vessels of a Spanish NGO
involved in rescuing migrants in the Mediterranean arrived in the Spanish
port of Palma on Saturday carrying a woman found drifting on a deflated
dinghy off Libya as well as the bodies of a boy and another woman.

The two ships of Proactiva Open Arms were escorted to the port of the
capital of the Balearic island of Majorca by a Spanish police ship at 7:15
am.

The rescued woman is a 40-year-old from Cameroon named Josepha.
Proactiva said it transported her to Spain — where the Spanish Red Cross
received her — for her “protection” and to enable her to testify freely.

Italy had earlier offered to take in the woman but not the bodies,
telling the Spaniards that the Libyan coastguard was in charge of the rescue
operation.

Proactiva accuses Libyan coastguards of having saved the rest of the
migrants on board the dinghy but not the two women and the child, whom they
say refused to board the rescue vessel and go back to Libya.

The NGO alleges that as a result, the coastguards left them and deflated
the dinghy. Rescuers let air out of migrants’ boats to stop them from being
re-used and this boat had been slashed with a knife.

Proactive Open Arms’s director Oscar Camps, who said Josepha remained in
a state of shock, said he and the NGO were appalled at the logistical
difficulties facing rescuers.

– ‘We are indignant’ –

“We are indignant, we once again condemn the policies being followed in
the central Mediterranean, not just by one government but by several. The
difficulties we have faced to save one life are just incredible,” Camps told
a news conference.

His organisation has accused the skipper of the Triades, the Panamanian-
registered vessel which discovered the migrants at sea and alerted the Libyan
coastguard of failing to come to their aid.

Camps added they were also seeking to have legal action brought against
the skipper of the Libyan coastguard patrol boat and against the Italian
coastguard “who will have something to say on what happened 80 to 90 miles
off their coast — practically the same distance as from Libya.”

Libyan coastguards had earlier denied Proactiva’s accusations and said
they rescued 165 migrants from a boat in the same area on Monday night,
without leaving anyone on board.

They also blamed a lack of resources, particularly for night operations.

Erasmo Palazzotto, a lawmaker from the leftist opposition Free and Equal
party, meanwhile laid much of the blame at the feet of the Italian
government.

“The Italian government, with the silence complicity of Europe, is
financing militia, traffickers and criminal groups which have organised
themselves to form what they call the Libyan coastguard.

“Today, no authority controls anything whatsoever in Libya,” Palazzotto
said.

At the Proactiva press conference, NBA star Marc Gasol, who took part in
the rescue operation, also urged a better response.

“Everybody is urging a response in order to know what happened,” Gasol
said.

But Rome rejected the accusations.

“I’m sorry, but Open Arms is targeting the wrong people,” said Transport
Minister Danilo Toninelli, who is in charge of Italy’s coastguards.

“In the Mediterranean, Italy is an example of humanity and the
efficiency of its rescue services… We’re not interested in polemics. We’re
interested in working together to avoid deaths at sea,” the minister said.

In mid-March, a boat belonging to Open Arms was seized and held for a
month in Sicily on accusations of aiding illegal immigration.

On Saturday, the captain of one of the boats, Marc Reig, said his vessel
would set off again for Libya, possibly “as soon as Sunday”, to resume rescue
operations.

BSS/AFP/MSY/0846 hrs