Rescue

Ocean Viking to disembark 373 survivors in Augusta, Italy

01.25.2021

Marseille, 25/01/2021 – The Ocean Viking, a rescue ship operated by the European maritime rescue organisation SOS MEDITERRANEE, received instructions from Italian maritime authorities to disembark 373 survivors in Augusta, Italy. The disembarkation is planned for the morning of January 25. SOS MEDITERRANEE welcomes this announcement with relief as weather conditions have been deteriorating significantly over the past 48 hours, making the situation onboard very difficult to sustain for survivors and the crew.  

 

“We feared another lengthy standoff with no solution in sight” 

“After weeks of bad weather, conditions off the Libyan coast improved earlier this week, which led to numerous departures of people trying to flee across the central Mediterranean on unseaworthy, overcrowded boats. Reports of shipwrecks and interceptions by the Libyan Coast Guard came in as the team on the Ocean Viking, the only civil rescue ship at sea this week, was engaged in intense search and rescue operations”, says Luisa Albera, Search and Rescue coordinator onboard the Ocean Viking for SOS MEDITERRANEE.  

“From the survivors on board we heard horrifying accounts of the inhumane treatment they endured in Libya. The past two days were extremely hard for the 373 survivors on board, as weather conditions deteriorated rapidly. Knowing we have numerous babies and small children onboard, who were especially struggling with seasickness, we feared another lengthy standoff with no solution in sight, as we experienced in the past,” she continues 

“While we are relieved for the 373 people on our ship, we insist again that a return to an effective coordination of State-led search and rescue in the central Mediterranean is vital. Lives depend on it. And while civil society is filling this void, EU member states must find a sustainable solution for a swift and predictable disembarkation mechanism, supporting European coastal states and working to uphold maritime law at our common southern shores,” says Albera. 

“Honestly, I also thought I would die. This happens all the time in Libya.” 

Many of the survivors have told our team of their harrowing stories of abuse endured in Libya and described an appalling cycle of violence along their journey. Many had previously attempted the dangerous sea crossing, were intercepted at sea and brought back to the same spiral of abuse multiple times. 

Among the survivors on board is a young man from Mali with a serious gunshot wound on his upper arm. Kylian (name changed) was shot in an armed robbery in Libya less than two weeks ago.  

“In Libya, we were all crammed in a house together, we weren’t free to go where we want. I was outside when the bandits came, and I wanted to run in to warn the others. When they shot me, I fell to the ground. They thought I was dead, they just left me there. Honestly, I also thought I would die. This happens all the time in Libya. I only got treatment for this wound 4 hours later, a friend showed me to a Cameroonian woman who was a doctor and took me in.” 

 

374 people rescued in less than 48 hours, amongst them many infants and unaccompanied minors 

The Ocean Viking rescued 374 people from 4 rubber boats in distress in 3 different rescue operations in the Libyan Search and Rescue Region within less than 48 hours. Among the survivors are 165 minors. Nearly 80 % of them are unaccompanied. 21 are newborns and young children up to the age of 4. 48 women were rescued from these overcrowded, unseaworthy dinghies. Four of them were pregnant and 32 traveling alone. One of them, Nadine, was medically evacuated because she was in the late stages of a high-risk pregnancy and needed urgent medical care on shore. An Italian coastguard vessel promptly performed the evacuation to Lampedusa on Saturday afternoon.  

 

Note to editors: 

The Ocean Viking rescued 374 people from 4 rubber boats in distress in 3 different rescue operations in the Libyan Search and Rescue Region on Thursday 21 and Friday 22, January 2021. Three of the boats were reported to maritime authorities and the Ocean Viking by the civil network Alarm Phone and spotted with the support of civil aerial assets such as Moonbird (Sea Watch) and Colibri II (Pilotes Volontaires), one was spotted with binoculars from the Bridge of the ship. Several other boats reported in distress were intercepted by the Libyan coastguards as reported by civil airborne operations. In the past four days, following two requests for a place of safety to disembark made to the Libyan maritime authorities, the Ocean Viking asked for support to the Italian and Maltese Rescue Coordination Centres (RCCs) twice before being assigned a place of disembarkation in Augusta, Sicily, by the Italian authorities.  

Cover Picture: Fabian Mondl / SOS MEDITERRANEE