800 migrants on board German rescue ship reaches Sicilian port

Germany COVID-19 News

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German migrant rescue vessel carrying more than 800 people steamed into the Sicilian port of Trapani yesterday after being granted permission by Italian authorities following days of waiting in the Mediterranean Sea.

The humanitarian vessel was granted authorisation to dock just hours after Mission Lifeline’s Rise Above, a fellow charity ship, delivered urgently-needed food and blankets to the Sea-Eye 4.

The ship is carrying five pregnant women as well as over 200 minors — including “many children under the age of 10” — Sea-Eye 4 said in a statement.

On Saturday, the ship had cruised off the coast of Sicily as it awaited authorisation to disembark. Arrival in Trapani was expected later yesterday.

“We are relieved and overjoyed that the difficult hours for our crew and the rescued people will end on Sunday and that the people will finally be safe in Italy,” Gorden Isler from Sea-Eye said.

“Our crew is working at the limits of what is humanly possible,” French news agency AFP quoted Isler as saying.

Over 200 people had been treated at the onboard hospital.

“The ship must be allowed to dock immediately to ensure the safety of all those rescued and the crew,” he said, adding that “negotiations on the distribution of the rescued” should be conducted after the migrants land.

The charity ship had already been carrying nearly 400 people when on Thursday it raced to rescue another 400 people crowded onto a wooden boat that was filling with water.

Since then, the Sea-Eye 4, which is operated by the charity Sea-Eye, repeatedly appealed to the government in Rome to allow it to dock.

The first destination was the Italian island of Lampedusa. However, the ship was not permitted to dock there.

Malta also did not respond to emergency calls over the course of the week from the NGO, Isler said, adding that he was “appalled” by the country’s “failure to provide assistance.”

The ship then headed towards Sicily as chances there were considered better and the weather was worsening, Isler told German news agency dpa.

 

 

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