Hundreds Of Migrants Stuck Between Malta And Sicily As Voyage To Spain Deemed Too Risky
Photo: Sara Alonso Esparza
A ship with 629 migrants on board remains stranded between Malta and Sicily as the crew called off a planned trip to Spain after deeming the journey too risky.
The fate of the migrants aboard the Aquarius ship has been the centre of a diplomatic spat between Malta and Italy, with both countries insisting each other should take them in. Crisis appeared to have been averted this afternoon after Spain’s new president Pedro Sanches offered to take the ship to Valencia, citing his country’s humanitarian obligations.
However, journalists aboard the Aquarius are now reporting that the organisers of the rescue mission, from the NGOs SOS Méditerranée and Medecins Sans Frontieres, have decided travelling to Valencia would be too risky.
BREAKING: EL #AQUARIUS ve absolutamente inviable ir a España en estas circunstancias. El barco está abarrotado. No sería seguro ni para los migrantes, ni para la tripulación ni para el barco. Además, la previsión meteorológica es adversa. @rne
— SaraAlonsoEsparza (@SAlonsoEsparza) June 11, 2018
“It is absolutely unviable for the Aquarius to travel to Spain in these circumstances,” Radio Nacional de España journalist Sara Alonso Esparza tweeted. “The ship is crowded and such a long trip will not be safe for the migrants, the crew or the ship. Moreover, the weather conditions are adverse.”
Meanwhile, Euronews’ correspondent Anelise Borges reported that the situation aboard the Aquarius has deteriorated, with supplies such as blankets and clean clothes starting to run out and fights breaking out amongst the migrants.
There are an estimated 629 migrants on boat the Aquarius, including 123 unaccompanied minors and seven pregnant women. The migrants, who were picked up from different boats in Libyan waters, hail from several African countries – including Nigeria, Morocco, Sierra Leone, Algeria and Sudan.