EU seeks safe harbour for ship carrying 141 rescued migrants 

One of the smugglers' boats, a small wooden boat with 25 migrants, appeared to have been at sea for nearly 35 hours, the groups said.
Image used for representational purpose only.
Image used for representational purpose only.

MILAN: The European Commission said today that it is contacted with a number of member states to identify a country willing to take 141 migrants picked up by a rescue ship after the French groups operating the ship appealed for a safe port and Italy said Britain should take responsibility.

Doctors Without Borders, which operates the ship Aquarius along with SOS Mediterranee, said that the health of those rescued in two operations Friday was stable but many were weak and malnourished.

One of the smugglers' boats, a small wooden boat with 25 migrants, appeared to have been at sea for nearly 35 hours, the groups said.

Most of the 141 migrants were from Somalia and Eritrea and they include 67 unaccompanied minors.

Italy continues to refuse port to humanitarian rescue ships, and the country's transport minister, Danilo Toninelli, said on Twitter that Britain should take responsibility for the migrants aboard the Aquarius because it sails under the flag of the British territory of Gibraltar.

Toninelli said the rescue was coordinated by Libyan authorities and that the ship was in Maltese waters.

EU Commission spokeswoman Tove Ernst said in Brussels that the commission was in touch with member states to find a solution, but she couldn't say how many states were involved in the talks since the situation was changing.

She said that "it could of course be the case that in theory a flag state of a rescue ship could be considered a potential location for disembarkation, but this might not be possible in practice.

" "As we have done in a number of previous cases, we stand ready to lend full diplomatic support and weight to a swift solution of the incident," Ernst said.

Doctors Without Borders said in a statement that European governments focus their efforts on "propping up the Libyan JRCC (joint rescue cooperation center)" but the two rescues Friday underlined the unreliability of the system.

Aloys Vimard, Doctors Without Borders coordinator on the Aquarius, said the ship happened on the two boats by chance, even though the Libyans were aware of their distress.

In addition, those rescued reported that five ships had come into their vicinity before the Aquarius and did not offer help.

"It seems the very principle of rendering assistance to persons in distress at sea is now at stake.

Ships might be unwilling to respond to those in distress due to the high risk of being stranded and denied a place of safety," Vimard said.

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