ROME
Saving lives is more difficult than ever, but rescuers are adamant that the Italian government’s crackdown on charity ships will not stop them from helping migrants who run into trouble crossing the Mediterranean.
Rome has brought in a slew of rules to curb the activities of non-governmental (NGO) ships accused of being a pull factor for migrants, from limiting the number of rescues to assigning them distant ports.
“All these regulations, laws, are just another attempt to complicate more and criminalize the work done by the NGOs,” said Salvador, 37, an Argentinian rescuer onboard the Ocean Viking.
The red and white ship, formerly a supply vessel for oil rigs that is now run as a rescue vessel by SOS Mediterranee, left the Italian port of Syracuse in southern Sicily on May 19 for its latest mission.
Since coming to power in 2022, far-right Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni has vowed to dramatically slash the number of people crossing by boat from the coast of North Africa.
Under a law adopted at the start of 2023, charity ships are obliged to travel “without delay” to port as soon as their first rescue is complete, even if they become aware of other migrants in difficulty.
“You can go to a rescue, you take 10 people, and then you have to travel four or five days to disembark them,” despite the Ocean Viking being able to carry “at least 400 people” at a time, Salvador told AFP.
In recent months, the Italian coastguard has assigned increasingly distant ports to ships, sometimes in difficult weather conditions, to the detriment of vulnerable migrants’ physical and mental health.
Going to far-off ports “increases the amount of fuel, and also the supplies” needed for those rescued, which “increases operational costs and also takes ships away” from where they are needed, Salvador said.
In 2023, the Ocean Viking traveled more than 21,000 additional kilometers to reach 13 distant ports, rather than disembarking in Sicily. That is estimated to have cost an extra 500,000 euros ($543,000) in fuel.
It is “frustrating” to be made “less effective,” Salvador said, his long black hair tied back out of the wind.
Those who break the law are fined up to 10,000 euros and their ships can be seized for 20 days, a punishment meted out to the Ocean Viking in February.
Repeat offenders risk their ships being confiscated permanently.
Charity crews face a tough choice: Comply with the Italian authorities by leaving migrant boats adrift despite the risk that people could die, or disobey and face having their ships impounded.
“In 20 days, we could save 100, 200 or even 400 people,” says Daniel Auerbacher, head of operations at SOS Mediterranee.
When the Ocean Viking goes from one rescue to the next, it is “not because we want to disobey orders, but because international law takes precedence. And it requires us to alter our course, to go towards the ship in distress,” he said.
In the latest tightening of screws, Italy‘s civil aviation authority this month banned surveillance planes used by charities to spot migrant boats from Sicilian airports.