Sunday, August 6, 2017

Irish naval vessel rescues 109 migrants off Tripoli coast


LÉ William Butler Yeats deployed to Mediterranean in mid-July as part of Operation Sophia

The Irish Times

30 July 2017


The Irish naval vessel LÉ William Butler Yeats on Sunday rescued 109 migrants off the coast of Tripoli, in its first search and rescue mission since deploying to the Mediterranean earlier this month.

Following a request from the Italian Maritime Rescue Co-Ordination Centre, the ship successfully located and rescued the people 56 nautical miles north east of Tripoli, a Defence Forces spokesman confirmed.

“The rescue commenced at 12.30pm and all migrants were on board by 4.30pm and are now receiving food, water and medical treatment where required,” he said.

The ship was due to transfer the rescued people to an Italian coast guard vessel later on Sunday and will conduct further search and rescue operations if required.

LÉ William Butler Yeats deployed to the Mediterranean July 14th as part of the Government’s response to the migrant crisis in Europe.

It was commissioned in October last year at a ceremony in Galway.

Ahead of the ship’s departure on its mission, Taoiseach Leo Varadkar said he did not agree with concerns expressed by Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) about Ireland’s participation in the European Union’s Operation Sophia in the Mediterranean.

MSF, which has two ships involved in migrant rescue, had warned that Ireland’s shift from humanitarian to what it described as a “military focused” EU operation could “weaken dedicated search and rescue capacity”.

Mr Varadkar said the EU operation had a UN mandate and was supported by the Government and Dáil.

Operation Sophia, initiated by the EU in June 2015, has a core mandate of identifying, capturing and disposing of vessels and other “enabling assets” used or suspected of being used by migrant smugglers or traffickers.

It has already been engaged in training members of the Libyan coastguard and its aim is to build good relations with the Tripoli administration which would lead to an invitation into Libyan territorial waters to pursue smugglers.

Cabinet approval for Naval Service transition to the EU mission was secured by Minister of State for Defence Paul Kehoe early in July, and a motion was carried in the Dáil by 80 votes to 38 as part of the “triple lock” mechanism for approving Defence Force participation overseas.


Source:  https://www.irishtimes.com/news/ireland/irish-news/irish-naval-vessel-rescues-109-migrants-off-tripoli-coast-1.3171769

NGO with ties to Pope accused of running ‘taxi service’ for immigrants


Crux

By Claire Giangravè

29 July  2017


The founder of the Spanish NGO “Proactiva Open Arms,” Oscar Camps who has met with Pope Francis twice on the issue of immigration, is defending his organization and others against charges that they are driving up the number of immigrants by encouraging people to risk dangerous sea voyages in unreliable vessels in order to grab EU cash for immigrant help.

ROME - A Spanish NGO that operates in the Mediterranean Sea, and which has ties to Pope Francis through its founder, has been accused of allegedly colluding with traffickers in order to ‘taxi’ migrants from the Libyan coasts to Italy.

There is no suggestion that Pope Francis approved of, or was even aware of, the controversial activity.

This is the latest development in an ongoing debate in Europe that sees NGOs under attack for taking their boats close to the North African coast, and consequentially encouraging traffickers to use unfit vessels confident that rescue is on the way.

According to some critics, the NGOs make a profit, alongside the traffickers, by cashing in on the millions of dollars set aside for the migrant-handling business in the E.U.

Images have surfaced on the web showing that the boats belonging to the Spanish NGO “Proactiva Open Arms” were as close as one nautical mile from the Libyan coast on July 25, well outside the international waters in which they’re supposed to operate.

The founder of Proactiva, Oscar Camps, has met with Pope Francis on two occasions. The first time was in 2016, when he gifted the pontiff with the lifejacket of a six-year old Syrian girl who died at sea.

Pope Francis used the vest to illustrate the plight of migrants when talking to over four hundred children immigrants and refugees of different ethnicities, cultures and religions at the Vatican in 2016.  “He brought me this jacket,” the pope said referring to Camps. “With tears in his eyes he said to me, ‘Father, I couldn’t do it - there was a little girl on the waves, and I did all I could, but I couldn’t save her: only her life vest was left.’”

The second was a 40-minute audience on April 22, just as the allegations against NGOs were beginning to surface in Italian media. While speaking to the press after the meeting, Camps said that the audience was an opportunity to talk about the stories of those saved at sea, and that the pope is the only global leader who has the migrant issue at heart.

Francis has effectively made the migrant crisis a cornerstone of his pontificate. While the pope recognizes that “every country has the right to control its borders,” as he told Spanish newspaper El País in January, he has also called the global community to action and solidarity with migrants.

Concerning the recent accusations against NGOs, Catholic media outlets took different approaches. On one side, the Vatican daily, L’Osservatore Romano, was quick to criticize the scandal, that weighed on “the skin of migrants.” On the other, an editorial in Avvenire, the daily of the Italian Episcopal Conference (CEI), insisted that the world of NGOs is “demanding and good,” and that “one cannot remain neutral and indifferent in front of the efforts made to defame its image.”

In a tweet, Camps defended himself from accusations of colluding with traffickers by claiming that the “AIS signal has been hacked to show we’re in Libyan waters,” and that they updated the Italian coast guard every two hours about their position. (The reference is to the Automatic Identification System, a positioning system for ships used to avoid collisions.)

Skeptical about Camps’ claims, various nationalist and anti-immigration Twitter accounts have decried the behavior of the Open Arms vessel, comparing it to a “taxi service,” adding that it only leads to more migrants braving the Mediterranean Sea and consequentially more deaths.

“In reality, there is very little evidence and proof of this type of argument,” Luca Raineri, analyst and researcher at the St. Anna University of Pisa specialized in Northern Africa, told Crux in an interview, in essence supporting Camps.

“We know that migrant flows are caused by all kinds of dynamics, and that it is not the presence of NGOs that stimulates, eases or amplifies these dynamics,” he said.

“To talk of a ‘taxi service’ seems to me, frankly, to be an excessive statement,” he said.

In a May interview with Crux, Mario Marazziti, president of the committee for social affairs at the Italian House of Representatives and former spokesmen for the community of Sant’Egidio, a lay movement particularly active in the migrant sector, took a similar position.

“Without NGOs, the number of those who die at sea would be double, probably much, much higher,” Marazziti underlined.

“If NGOs did not approach the 12-mile line from the Libyan coasts, but stopped at 30, there would be 600 square maritime miles unchecked, and a much higher number of casualties. It’s math. Only this time, it involves human lives,” he said.

The Italian government, in an effort to exercise further control and monitoring of NGO’s running Search and Rescue operations in the Mediterranean, has proposed a ‘code of conduct’ to be signed by the nine organizations active there.

These are Doctors Without Borders, Moas, SOS Méditerranée, Sea Watch, Sea Eye, Proactiva Open Arms, LifeBoat, Jugend Rettet and Save the Children.

The code includes 13 points, presented on July 26, and to be signed on Monday July 31. The most contested points are:

* An interdiction from approaching the Libyan waters if not “in circumstances of extreme and immediate danger.”
* An obligation to keep the transponders on the boat active at all times.
* Not moving the people saved onto other boats.
* Declaring funding sources.
* Allowing the judicial police on board for routine checks.

Organizations that refuse to sign the code of conduct may not be allowed to have access to the Italian ports.

On July 28, NGOs were asked to submit their proposed changes to the code, which mostly focused on the point that allows the police to board the boats. The Italian Ministry of the Interior said that important “steps forward” had been made and that the meetings proceeded in an environment of “collaboration and understanding.”

Meanwhile, Proactiva Open Arms found 13 bodies of migrants off the coast of Libya on July 25. “Several pregnant women and mothers among the (dead),” Camps wrote on Twitter.

“And we are apparently the only ones who need a code of conduct.”

Source:  https://cruxnow.com/global-church/2017/07/29/ngo-ties-pope-accused-running-taxi-service-immigrants/

Eight migrants dead off Libya as Italy outlines naval mission


MailOnline/ AFP

1 August 2017

The bodies of eight migrants have been found at sea off the coast of Libya by rescuers coming to the aid of four rubber dinghies, the Italian coastguard said Tuesday.

Some 500 survivors were pulled to safety, the coastguard told AFP, illustrating the huge challenge that continues to bedevil authorities as people try to reach Europe.

The latest deaths came as the Italian government presented plans for a naval mission in Libyan territorial waters that aims to reduce the flow of migrants from the coast.

Spanish NGO Proactiva Open Arms, which was taking part in the rescues, said the corpses were recovered by the Santa Lucia merchant ship.

"We are here to stop more people drowning, today eight dead and four drifting boats" in distress, Proactiva's founder Oscar Champs said on Twitter.

The charity said there were 79 women and 39 minors -- including four young children -- among those rescued.

Nearly 95,000 people have been brought to safety in Italy this year, a rise of one percent on the same period last year, according to the interior ministry.

The government intends to send a logistics ship that could support Libyan units and will also offer a patrol boat, Italian Defence Minister Roberta Pinotti told lawmakers on Tuesday.

However Italy has no intention to create a naval blockade, which would be a "hostile act", she said, insisting that support for the Libyan mission was the aim and cooperation was necessary.

"Italy has always respected Libyan sovereignty," Pinotti added.

At least 2,385 migrants have died during the perilous crossing since January, the International Organization for Migration (IOM) said.

The latest deaths come as aid groups -- privately-funded boats performed 26 percent of rescues in 2016, rising to 35 percent so far this year -- are caught in a row over how they operate.

Medical charity Doctors Without Borders (MSF) refused Monday to sign a code of conduct on migrant-saving operations in the Mediterranean.

Sticking points cited were obligations for rescue boats to operate with an Italian police official on board and a ban on moving rescued migrants from one aid vessel to another while still at sea.

The code, created to address the biggest migrant phenomenon in Europe since World War II, lays down 13 rules Italy 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 lives.

Source:  http://www.dailymail.co.uk/wires/afp/article-4751158/Eight-migrants-dead-Libya-Italy-outlines-naval-mission.html

Italy to respect Libyan sovereignty in naval mission

EC says ports not guaranteed if NGOs don't sign code

ANSAmed

1 August 2017

(ANSAmed) - ROME, AUGUST 1 - Defence Minister Roberta Pinotti told the Lower House and Senate defence and foreign affairs committees that the government's proposed naval mission to support the Libyan coast guard's efforts against human traffickers "does not harm Libyan sovereignty in any way". She added: "our aim is to reinforce it". Pinotti stressed that the government's proposed naval mission to support Libya stemmed from a July 23 letter from Libyan Premier Fayez al-Sarraj requesting "naval and technical support". She said the government would provide this via "technical, logistical and operative support to Libyan naval units accompanying them with joint, coordinated activities". Premier Paolo Gentiloni announced last week that Italy was considering a request from Libya for the help in combatting human traffickers after meeting Libyan Sarraj in Rome.

Most of the over 93,000 migrants to have landed in Italy so far this year started their journey across the Mediterranean from Libya, which has been affected by chaos since a Paris-led campaign contributed to the fall of Muammar Gaddafi in 2011.

It is hoped that the mission with the Libyan coast guard can help stem this flow, which is causing massive strain on the Italian authorities.

Gentiloni said Friday that the use of Italian vessels to support Libya would not entail "an enormous deployment of big feels and air squadrons".

The EU is working in "full coordination with Italian authorities", the spokesperson for EU foreign affairs and security policy, Catherine Ray, said Tuesday when she was asked whether Brussels backs the new Italian mission of support to the Libyan coast guard. Ray said EU Foreign Policy Chief Federica Mogherini was in "regular contact with Prime Minister Paolo Gentiloni". Asked whether the EU meant to widen the Sophia operation, the EU's naval mission to combat the trafficking of migrants in the central-southern Mediterranean, along the lines of Italy's intervention, Ray said the EU first intended to see what Italy would do. She also noted that the European Council has just extended the Sophia operation, until the end of 2018. Doctors Without Borders (MSF), meanwhile, said Tuesday that it will continue to operate in the Mediterranean after refusing to sign a code of conduct at the Italian interior ministry for NGOs involved in migrant rescues at sea. "We did not accept the code of conduct because it does not protect our work and there is already international law that regulates everything," MSF Director General Gabriele Eminente told State broadcaster RAI. "We'll continue to work in the Mediterranean anyway, but at the moment I do not understand what this failure to sign entails". The introduction of the code of conduct comes after the NGOs involved in migrant rescues came under fire from some quarters in Italy for allegedly encouraging human traffickers.

The European Commission said Tuesday that it welcomed that some NGOs had signed the Italian code of conduct, pointing out that Brussels supported the document's preparation and calling on the "biggest number" possible to sign up. It said NGOs that do not sign will not be guaranteed to be able to take rescued migrants to Italian ports, if they were saved in areas outside Italian competence. It said international law stipulating that migrants be taken to a safe port remains valid, but stressed that this does not necessarily mean the nearest. (ANSAmed).


Source:  http://www.ansamed.info/ansamed/en/news/sections/politics/2017/08/01/italy-to-respect-libyan-sovereignty-in-naval-mission_54c22584-a181-4086-9771-1f0ae6b75ae5.html

Wednesday, August 2, 2017

Italian authorities impound German NGO rescue vessel for 'facilitating illegal immigration'


VIDEO - Lampedusa, Italy 02.08.2017 – Italian Coast Guard boards the German NGO vessel "Iuventa": http://videofq.meride.tv/fq2/video/folder85/ANSA95126_mp4_fq2.mp4

[02.08.2017]

The "Iuventa" vessel of the German NGO "Jugend Rettet" which did not adhere to the code of conduct was intercepted off Lampedusa overnight and subsequently escorted by the Italian Coast Guard back to port for inspection.

Several coast guard cutters were deployed to escort the "Iuventa" and security was tight around the peer where the vessel docked. Initially the Lampedusa Port Authority Chief - Lieutenant Paolo Monaco who boarded and inspected the vessel for over two hours said: "It is only a routine procedure that needs to be conducted. We will now control documents of the entire crew and if everything is in order the vessel may leave Lampedusa".

On board the ship, during the inspection two Syrian citizens were found which were later escorted to a local refugee reception facility.

Later in the afternoon in an official statement of the Italian Police it was announced that the German NGO "Iuventa" vessel which regularly conducts rescues of migrants near the Libyan coast was impounded in connection with the investigation opened already in October and during which sufficient information was uncovered suggesting that the vessel was used "to aid and abet in clandestine immigration".

The district prosecutor Ambrogio Cartosio who sought and obtained the court order to seize the boat said: "The seizure of the vessel was requested to prevent recurrence of the crime. There are three controversial episodes - he added - but there are other occurrences which will help to argue the case that this is a commonplace behavior".

This is not just a simple preventive measure. The vessel seizure is linked to a much larger investigation by the district prosecutor office in collaboration with the mobile team in Trapani and the Central Operational Service of the Anti-Crime Police Directorate. The Trapani prosecutors Ambrogio Cartosio and his deputy Andrea Tarondo are currently investigating all NGOs in the alleged collaboration with human traffickers.

* NOTE * The NGO “Jugend Rettet e.V.” was founded in 2015 in Germany with the objective of migrant rescue in the Mediterranean Sea. The ship “Iuventa” was bought two years ago in Emden, Germany and underwent a conversion from an old fishing cutter to a vessel adapted for NGO needs & purposes. The vessel is currently registered in Amsterdam under the Dutch flag.

German NGO official website: https://jugendrettet.org/en/  and Twitter: https://twitter.com/jugendrettet?lang=de





















02.08.2017  Lampedusa - Police seizing the German NGO vessel "Iuventa"


Source:

* 02.08.2017 - La Stampa - "Intercepted crew conversations on-board the "Iuventa" / Le intercettazioni dell’equipaggio a bordo della Iuventa": http://www.lastampa.it/2017/08/02/multimedia/italia/cronache/le-intercettazioni-dellequipaggio-a-bordo-della-iuventa-K9t52R1PcFkyhYjOox6y0J/pagina.html
* 02.08.2017 - tg24.sky.it - "Migrants, NGO seized ship. The Prosecutor's Office: contacts with traffickers / Migranti, sequestrata nave Ong. La Procura: contatti con i trafficanti": http://tg24.sky.it/cronaca/2017/08/02/migranti-sequestro-nave-iuventa-ong-lampedusa.html
* 02.08.2017 - La Stampa - "NGO ship stopped and seized off Lampedusa. Investigation alleged collaborations with the traffickers / Nave di una Ong fermata e sequestrata al largo di Lampedusa. Si indaga su presunte collaborazioni con gli scafisti": http://www.lastampa.it/2017/08/02/italia/cronache/migranti-nave-ong-fermata-al-largo-di-lampedusa-etw7ZCW0tUxXQ8IAEX9k8I/pagina.html
* 02.08.2017 - La Repubblica - Migrants, Trapani prosecutor seizes ship: 'collaboration between German NGOs and traffickers' / Migranti, procura Trapani sequestra nave Iuventa: "Intese tra Ong tedesca e trafficanti": http://www.repubblica.it/cronaca/2017/08/02/news/migranti_codice_ong_in_vigore_fermata_nave_in_mare_per_controlli-172151820/
* 02.08.2017 - Times & Colonist - "Italy seizes German group's rescue boat in immigration probe": http://www.timescolonist.com/italy-seizes-german-group-s-rescue-boat-in-immigration-probe-1.21552009






Tuesday, August 1, 2017

NGOs divided by Italy's new rescue code


EUobserver

By Eszter Zalan

1 August 2017


Five aid groups have refused to sign Italy’s code of conduct for organisations that run migrant rescue ships in the Mediterranean, the Italian interior ministry said on Monday (31 July).

Three other organisations backed the new rules, which include a ban on sending light signals that may help migrants and a ban on transferring migrants to other ships.

One of the organisations that refused to sign the code of conduct, Doctors Without Borders (MSF), said in a letter on Monday that they already respected several provisions, such as financial transparency.

MSF said that the code of conduct could lead to a decrease in the efficiency and capacity of the search and rescue response in the Mediterranean, leading to more deaths.

"Proposals - in particular the one stating that vessels engaged in rescue must disembark survivors to a place of safety as a rule instead of transferring to other ships - present unnecessary limitations to the means at our disposal today,” said the organisation, which noted that it had saved 16,000 people.

"A reduction in the number of rescue vessels would weaken an already insufficient search and rescue capacity, resulting in an increase in mass drownings,” MSF warned, adding that it observes all the maritime and international rules.

Save the Children did sign up to the code of conduct, saying that it already complied with most of the rules.

The Malta-based Migrant Offshore Aid Station (MOAS) and Spanish group Proactiva Open Arms also agreed to the code, while Germany's Sea-Watch, Sea-Eye and Jugend Rettet, and France's SOS Mediterranee abstained.

One of the issues they were concerned with was the obligation to accept police officers on board their vessels, which some organisations say interferes with the humanitarian principle of neutrality. Italy argues the officers are needed to root out traffickers hiding among migrants.

The Italian ministry said that all the organisations not participating in the scheme will be outside the “organised system of sea rescue”, and will face “all the consequences”, without going into details.

This year, 95,000 people arrived at Italy’s coast, and more than 2,378 people died on the journey in the Mediterranean, according to UN data.

In the first six months of this year, more than 30 percent of all rescue operations were carried out by NGOs.

Rome is concerned that the presence of NGOs encourages smugglers and migrants to embark on the perilous journey.

Italy had previously threatened to shut its ports to NGOs that did not sign up to the code of conduct.

Rome has also secured the backing of the the EU for the new rules. The European Commission has said the code would aim to better coordinate rescues at sea.

The 12-point code includes a ban on crossing into Libyan territorial waters and calls for cooperation with the police to investigate human trafficking.

But while NGO boats will be banned from Libyan waters, the Italian navy is getting ready to enter them.

Last week, Italy’s government agreed to send naval support to Libyan waters after a request was submitted by the UN-backed government in Tripoli, in its battle against people smugglers.

Rome’s efforts to curb the NGOs’ activities at sea have also been fuelled by an increasingly widespread perception that the organisations are aiding smugglers, something the aid groups have repeatedly denied.

Aside from human rights groups, the UN’s children's agency, Unicef, has also condemned Italy’s code of conduct. It said earlier this month that the new rules put children's lives at risk.


Source: https://euobserver.com/migration/138656



MSF and Jugent Rettet do not sign NGO code of conduct

Save the Children and MOAS do, 'we will continue to save lives'

ANSAmed

31 July 2017

ROME - Doctors Without Borders (MSF) and the German Jugend Rettet did not sign a ''code of conduct'' on Monday proposed by Italian officials for all NGOs involved in migrant rescue operations in the Mediterranean. Save the Children and the Migrant Offshore Aid Station (MOAS) instead signed it. ''Our mission has always been that of saving the most lives possible at sea and this document enables us to continue doing so,'' MOAS founder Christopher Catrambone said on the sidelines of the meeting at the Italian interior ministry.

Save the Children's Valerio Neri said that most of the points in the code ''indicate things we already do and clarifications have been provided on a couple of points that we were concerned about, and so we don't have any qualms about signing it.'' ''We are convinced,'' he added, ''that we did the right thing and I am sorry that other NGOs did not follow us.'' The Italian chief of Doctors Without Borders (MSF), Gabriele Eminente, ''all the non-problematic points of the code will be complied with as we have always done. We appreciated the constructive approach of the ministry, but the document does not underscore that our aim is to save lives, and there are two points that we cannot agree to sign on to: police onboard and the possible ban on transboarding onto other ships of the people rescued.''

Source: http://www.ansamed.info/ansamed/en/news/nations/libya/2017/07/31/msf-and-jugent-rettet-do-not-sign-ngo-code-of-conduct_4b038fbc-8c50-4e0d-af4a-8252a74a8d28.html