Italy-flagged migrant rescue ship challenges Italian policy

Italy-flagged migrant rescue ship challenges Italian policy
The Aquarius rescue vessel, chartered by French NGO SOS-Mediterranee and Doctors Without Borders (MSF), is seen during a rescue drill at open sea on June 23, 2018 in the central Mediterranean Sea. On Thursday, the Italian-flagged rescue ship Mare Jonio set sail for the deadly migrant smuggling route, challenging moves by Italy’s populist government to shut down such humanitarian operations. (AFP / PAU BARRENA)
Updated 05 October 2018
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Italy-flagged migrant rescue ship challenges Italian policy

Italy-flagged migrant rescue ship challenges Italian policy
  • Italian lawmaker Nicola Fratoianni, whose party backs the Mare Jonio project, said the humanitarian operation was “a real rescue operation to fill the lack of rescue assets in the Mediterranean Sea”
  • Some 82,100 migrants have made it across the Mediterranean Sea to Europe this year, and another 1,741 have died in the attempt

ROME: An Italian-flagged rescue ship set sail Thursday for the deadly migrant smuggling route in the central Mediterranean Sea, challenging moves by Italy’s populist government to shut down such humanitarian operations.
The Mare Jonio, a former tug boat, left from the Sicilian port of Augusta. The Mediterranea humanitarian group bought and equipped the 37-meter (120-foot) long ship and has started a crowd-funding initiative.
“Our mission is to be present: Present at sea to monitor, to witness, to report the dramatic situation that every day women, men and children risk to cross the Mediterranean Sea,” said Ada Talarico, a Mediterranea spokeswoman.
Another rescue group, SeaWatch, is among those supporting the operation.
Italy’s hard-line Interior Minister Matteo Salvini has refused to allow non-Italian rescue ships to dock in Italy with migrants they have rescued at sea.
Italian lawmaker Nicola Fratoianni, whose party backs the Mare Jonio project, said the humanitarian operation wasn’t merely a provocation against Salvini but “a real rescue operation to fill the lack of rescue assets in the Mediterranean Sea.”
Salvini, whose League party came to power on an anti-migrant platform, has mounted a crackdown against aid groups that for years rescued thousands of migrants fleeing Libya aboard unseaworthy smugglers’ boats.
Earlier this year, he forbade aid groups from docking in Italy, forcing other Mediterranean countries to take them in and effectively halting their activities.
According to the International Organization for Migration, some 82,100 migrants have made it across the Mediterranean Sea to Europe this year, and another 1,741 have died in the attempt.