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Italy seizes migrant rescue ship that defied ban and sailed to Sicily

AFP
AFP - [email protected]
Italy seizes migrant rescue ship that defied ban and sailed to Sicily
The Italian coast guard approaches another Mission Lifeline rescue ship in June 2018. Photo: Hermine Poschmann/Mission Lifeline/AFP

Italian authorities on Monday seized the charity rescue vessel Eleonore, disembarking around 100 migrants aboard after the ship entered Italian territorial waters despite a ban.

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"Now we are in a safe port," Eleonore's captain Claus-Peter Reisch tweeted, before adding "now our ship is confiscated" and inviting contributions for a new one.

The ship, operated by German charity Mission Lifeline, has been at sea for eight days waiting for a safe port to dock after rescuing over 100 migrants in distress while crossing the Mediterranean. Captain Reisch said he headed for Italy as "the situation on board is life-threatening" because of heavy rain overnight and stormy seas.

READ ALSO: UN concerned by Italy's new law to fine migrant rescue ships up to €1m

Another rescue vessel, the Mare Jonio, on Monday said it would disembark its 31 rescued migrants.

"We have just been informed that the Italian coastguard will soon disembark 'for health reasons' the last 31 people on board," Mediterranea Saving Lives, which operates the vessel, tweeted.

"Their odyssey is over and a bit of humanity can be seen on the horizon. Welcome to Europe!" the charity tweeted, with the vessel currently off the coast of Italy's southern island Lampedusa.

Three charity vessels are currently banned from entering Italian territorial waters in accordance with the hardline politics of the outgoing League-Five Star Movement coalition government. Italy customs officers on Monday seized the Eleonore as part of the draconian legislation.

The Mare Jonio rescued 98 people in distress off Libya last week, with 67 vulnerable people disembarked to Italy, including women, children and urgent medical cases, spokesman Luca Faenzi said.

A third vessel, the Alan Kurdi operated by German charity Sea Eye, was on Monday sailing between Malta and Italy after also being banned from Italian waters by outgoing interior minister Matteo Salvini.

READ ALSO: How Matteo Salvini lost his gamble to become Italy's PM – for now

Salvini, who is being removed from the government after he tried to bring it down, issued a tough security decree earlier this year which fines rescue vessels a million euros and provides for them to be seized and their captains prosecuted if they enter Italian waters without authorisation.

Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte is in talks to form a new government without Salvini. 

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