ON BOARD THE AQUARIUS: On board the Aquarius, one of the last NGO ships still operating off the coast of Libya, rescuers are worried they are not seeing any more boatloads of migrants at sea.
Libya’s navy, last week, ordered foreign vessels to stay out of a coastal “search-and-rescue zone” for migrants headed for Europe, a measure aimed at non-governmental organizations (NGOs) it accuses of facilitating traffickers in illegal migration.
One by one, the NGOs halted operations, except the Aquarius. The 68-meter orange boat, formerly used by the German coast guard, sailed alone off the Libyan coast on Sunday.
“For the moment, we are continuing our patrol operation in international waters,” said Nicola Stall, search and rescue coordinator for the Aquarius, which is operated by SOS Mediterranee and Doctors Without Borders (MSF).
And so the Aquarius team of rescuers keeps up its two-hour rotation, day and night, to watch for migrants floating on overcrowded and unseaworthy boats.
MSF workers, meanwhile, check their stocks of medications, while other volunteers give the bridge a fresh coat of paint.
As they wait, they are concerned about the calm sea and the favorable winds of the past few days. Despite such weather conditions, they have not seen a migrant boat for a week now.
“It’s very hard to know what is going on in Libya,” says Marcella Kraay, the MSF chief on board. Even during the bad weather in winter, they have never gone more than three weeks without rescuing hundreds of migrants.
“What we’re seeing at sea is that it seems fewer small boats are leaving Libya, and those that do leave are intercepted by the Libyan coast guards,” she says, adding that they were trying to get Libya to clarify the zone that foreign ships are barred from.
The Aquarius may be joined by vessels from the Spanish charity Proactiva Open Arms, which was expected to resume operations on Monday.
Last week Libyan coast guards frightened off most NGO rescue ships when they fired shots in the air opposite one vessel, warning that they would target it directly the next time.
The Aquarius has an emergency plan so everyone on board can lock themselves in should the ship be boarded.
There are about a dozen people from the two NGOs, from several European countries as well as the US and Australia.
Sailors volunteer their time to SOS Mediterranee, while the MSF team includes doctors as well as logistical and technical people, veterans of humanitarian crises such as the Ebola epidemic and the Iraqi battle at Mosul.
The ship’s captain hails from Belarus and the roughly 10 crew members are mostly Slavs, hired with the boat but having chosen to take part in this rescue mission, which has been going on since last year.
At night, the Aquarius keeps about 30 miles from the Libyan coast, mainly to avoid fishermen’s nets. During the day, it moves closer so the coastline is visible, but stays about 24 miles away unless the Italian coast guard calls on them to help with rescues nearer shore.
Six years since a revolution that toppled longtime dictator Muammar Qaddafi, Libya has become a key departure point for migrants risking their lives to cross the Mediterranean to Europe.
Italy, which has borne the brunt of the migrant influx from north Africa, has welcomed Libya’s decision to bar NGO ships and invest more in its coast guard.
The number of migrants reaching Italy is down compared with last year. So far in August, authorities say there have been 1,700 arrivals, far from the 21,300 recorded for the entire month in 2016.
But for humanitarian groups, what happens to migrants returned to or kept in camps in Libya is even more worrying.
“Fewer ships in the area will mean more people will drown at sea. And those taken back by the Libyan coast guards will be kept in captivity, and again exposed to violence, abuse, maltreatment, extortion,” says MSF’s Kraay. “This is really a grave concern.”
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