SOS Méditerranée
SOS Méditerranée is a European, maritime-humanitarian organisation for the rescue of life at sea, currently operating in the Mediterranean sea in international waters north of Libya. The organization chartered the Aquarius and more recently the Ocean Viking in order to rescue people fleeing by sea from Libya and who risk drowning.[1] The group was founded in June 2015 by German former captain Klaus Vogel and Frenchwoman Sophie Beau after the Italian navy ended the rescue Operation Mare Nostrum in 2014. Its headquarters are in Marseille (France), Milan (Italy), Frankfurt (Germany), Geneva (Switzerland).
In 2023, SOS Méditerranée was named as one of three laureates of the Right Livelihood Award, for "its life-saving humanitarian search and rescue operations in the Mediterranean Sea".[2]
European migration
The organization is best known for its actions during the European migrant crisis of rescuing migrants from sinking vessels in international waters north of Libya and providing the survivors with medical care and shelter, before being disembarked in a place of safety mostly in European ports in Italy and Malta. Since the start of the rescue operation in 2015, the Aquarius has saved more than 29,000 lives. They are considered a "taxi service for migrants" by Italian Minister of the Interior, deputy prime minister and leader of the far-right anti-migration party La Lega Matteo Salvini[3] and have been denied entry to Italy and Malta.[4] They work in partnership with Doctors Without Borders. SOS Méditerranée clashed with Libyan coastguards during 2017 but continues to operate in the Libyan search and rescue region in international waters north of Libya.[5]
Network
SOS Méditerranée works as a European association with teams in Germany, France, Italy and Switzerland forming a European network, jointly financing and operating the rescue ship Aquarius, which has been in continuous operation since February 2016 in international waters between Italy and Libya.
The medical care has been provided by Doctors without Borders since May 2016. And from July 2021 till now, it is provided by International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies (IFRC).
The Aquarius
It is a robust and seaworthy ship that offers wide spaces below deck, making it very suitable for year-round use as a rescue ship in the Mediterranean. Until 2009 the Aquarius was operated as a fishery protection vessel.
- Size: Length 77 m, Width 11.8 m, Draught 5.6 m
- Crew: Nautical and Technical Crew of 10 + Search and Rescue and Medical Crew
- Rescue capacity: 200 – 550 people
- Costs per day: 11.000 €
SOS Méditerranée used the Aquarius from February 2016 to October 2018, after which operations have continued with the Ocean Viking.[6]
Ocean Viking
On 21 July 2019 SOS Méditerranée announced a new rescue campaign off the Libyan coast, using a cargo ship, the Ocean Viking.[7] The approach is supported by the Norwegian authorities; the vessel is registered there.[8] The operation costs €14,000 per day.[9]
The 69 m long by 15 m wide vessel was built in 1986 to serve as a support vessel for oil rigs in the North Sea. She is operated by around thirty people (nine crew members, a search and rescue team and medical personnel) and can carry up to 200 survivors.[10] Ocean Viking is faster and better equipped than the Aquarius. Onboard microphones and cameras will make it possible to record everything that happens on board and around the boat, in order to prove, if necessary, that operations are carried out within a legal framework. The ship, which will respect the ban on disembarking migrants in Italian ports,[11] is banned from refueling in Malta.[12]
As of 2021, SOS Méditerranée continues its life-saving rescue operations using the Ocean Viking.[6]
Funding
SOS MEDITERRANEE is a non-profit association and is financed through private and public donations.
Its partner, Doctors Without Borders (MSF), contributes to the monthly costs for the Aquarius and staffs the medical team on board.
See also
References
- SOS Mediterranee sosmediterranee.org accessed 25 April 2021
- "'Alternative Nobel' goes to SOS Mediterranee". DW. 28 September 2023. Retrieved 28 September 2023.
- Nick Squires, "Rescue boat carrying 600 migrants stranded in Mediterranean in stand-off between Italy and Malta", The Telegraph (11 June 2018). Retrieved 13 June 2018.
- "Spain urged to take in migrants abandoned by Malta and Italy", The Local (11 June 2018). Retrieved 13 June 2018.
- John Henley & Angela Giuffrida, "Three NGOs halt Mediterranean migrant rescues after Libyan hostility", The Guardian (14 August 2017), accessed 25 April 2021
- About Us sosmediterranee.com, accessed 30 April 2021
- Migrants : l'ONG SOS-Méditerranée annonce une nouvelle campagne au large de la Libye (tr. "Migrants: the NGO SOS-Méditerranée announces a new campaign off Libya") 21 July 2019 www.lefigaro.fr, accessed 6 May 2021
- SOS Méditerranée et MSF annoncent une nouvelle campagne de secours des migrants en mer (tr. "SOS Méditerranée and MSF announce a new campaign to help migrants at sea") 21 July 2019 www.lemonde.fr, accessed 6 May 2021
- Les migrants secourus par le navire "Ocean Viking" ont dérivé 48 heures et sont "dans un état d'extrême fatigue" (tr. "The migrants rescued by the ship "Ocean Viking" have drifted for 48 hours and are "in a state of extreme fatigue"") 11 August 2019 www.francetvinfo.fr, accessed 6 May 2021
- MSF reprend ses opérations de secours en mer face à la détérioration de la situation en Libye et à l'inaction européenne (tr. "MSF resumes its rescue operations at sea amid the deteriorating situation in Libya and European inaction ") 21 July 2019 www.msf.fr, accessed 6 May 2021
- Migrants: la justice italienne désavoue Salvini et ouvre ses bras à l’Open Arms (tr. "Migrants: Italian justice disowns Salvini and opens its arms to the Open Arms") 14 August 2021 www.lefigaro.fr, accessed 6 May 2021
- L’« Ocean-Viking », qui vient en aide aux migrants en Méditerranée, interdit de ravitaillement à Malte (tr. "The "Ocean-Viking", which helps migrants in the Mediterranean, banned from refueling in Malta") 21 July 2019 www.lemonde.fr, accessed 6 May 2021