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'Explosive' situation on migrant rescue boat in limbo off Italy
Rome, Aug 16 (AFP) Aug 16, 2019
The captain of a Spanish charity ship carrying 134 rescued migrants warned Friday of an "explosive" situation on board the vessel anchored within swimming distance of Italy's Lampedusa island but forbidden to approach.

Italy has evacuated a handful of people from the Open Arms ship for medical treatment but far-right Interior Minister Matteo Salvini refuses to allow the vessel to dock despite other European countries agreeing to take in the people on board.

The captain of the ship operated by Proactiva Open Arms, Marc Reig, said the migrants, rescued after leaving chaos-stricken Libya, were "broken psychologically".

"Every second that passes, the bomb ticks a second closer. Either someone cuts the red cable and defuses this bomb now, or the Open Arms will explode," he told Spain's TVE television.

"This is inhuman. We're close to land and people could swim there. They want to throw themselves in the water. It's untenable. They can't take it anymore."

The mainly African migrants aboard Open Arms have been plucked from boats in the Mediterranean this month, with weather conditions encouraging more departures from Libya.

In an interview with the Times of Malta, a rescued Ethiopian, Mohammed, recounted the horrors of his attempted crossing.

"There were 15 of us in the boat and I'm the only survivor," the 38-year-old told the newspaper from his hospital bed.

Having fled Ethiopia 15 years ago, Mohammed made his way first to Eritrea and then to Sudan.

In Zawiya, west of Tripoli, he paid a smuggler $700 for passage to Europe and was offered a place on a small inflatable dinghy, alongside two Ghanians, two other Ethiopians and 10 Somalians.

First the fuel ran out, then the food, and then the water.

"We saw a lot of boats. We cried help and signalled to them, but they didn't stop. A helicopter also flew over and then went away," Mohammed recounted.

He said he could not recall when the Maltese navy, alerted to the boat by a plane belonging to Europe's Frontex border agency, arrived.

Mohammed was transported by helicopter to a hospital in Malta.


- 'Taking the world for a ride ' -


Salvini, who is also deputy prime minister, insisted Friday he would "not give in" and accused NGOs such as Open Arms of "taking the world for a ride".

The Open Arms "has been dancing around the Mediterranean Sea for days with the sole aim of picking up as many people as possible to, as always, bring them only to Italy," he said in a statement.

"In all this time it could have gone to a Spanish port and back three times! These NGOs are just interested in scoring political points at the expense of the migrants and our country," Salvini said.

Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte blasted Salvini Thursday, saying "France, Germany, Romania, Portugal, Spain and Luxembourg have told me that they are ready to welcome the migrants".

Salvini has developed an "obsessive focus" on immigration, and has reduced the issue to a policy of "closed ports," he charged.

The UN refugee agency welcomed the news of a deal to distribute the migrants but regretted it took so long.

"People cannot be left at sea for days on end. Predictable, regional and fair approach urgently needed so no rescued person is again left at sea for so long," the UNHCR tweeted.


- 'Listening to my conscience' -


The fate of the migrants aboard the Open Arms vessel is now at the centre of a political crisis in Italy.

Earlier this month, Salvini signed a decree banning the Open Arms from Italian waters, saying it was to protect public order.

But Proactiva appealed to an administrative court which on Wednesday suspended his decree.

Salvini then signed a new one blocking the ship, but in a demonstration of his diminished power, Italy's defence minister blocked it.

Elisabetta Trenta, an M5S party member with the authority to sign off on Salvini's decree, announced she had decided not to do so after "listening to my conscience".

Her Spanish counterpart Margarita Robles said Friday this showed Salvini had been "discredited by his own government."

In Brussels, spokeswoman Vanessa Mock said the European Commission welcomed the willingness of member states to help relocate the migrants.

The Commission is ready to help "once a solution has been found for the disembarkation of the persons rescued at sea. The situation where persons are stranded at sea for days and weeks on end is untenable."

Another rescue ship, the Ocean Viking, operated by SOS Mediterranee and Doctors without Borders (MSF), is also looking for a port to dock with more than 350 migrants on board.

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