Newborn Ali and his family are safe, but the future of the other 249 survivors remains uncertain
Although the delivery went well, the mother and her newborn needed postnatal specialised medical care. The MSF team therefore requested a medical evacuation to the nearest competent authorities, Malta and Italy. Malta's first proposal was to evacuate Fatima* and Ali* by helicopter without giving any options to the other three children, thus separating the family. In addition to being immoral and increasing the psychological trauma of the family, their separation would have gone against two fundamental and universal human rights: the right to family life and unity together with the principle of the best interest of the child. After hours of negotiations, all the members of the family were finally taken to Lampedusa and then transferred to Sicily, where we hope they will get the appropriate care and protection. Another woman on board, nine months pregnant, also needed immediate medical attention that could not be provided on the ship and was evacuated to Malta the same night. The evacuation of a 14-year-old boy is imminent too.
"We are of course relieved that the medical evacuations have taken place. Further delays could have not only impacted their well-being but also caused deterioration of their fragile health status, as medical follow-up was essential,” says Kira Smith, Midwife on Geo Barents.
The proposal from the authorities was troubling on multiple levels.
"Separating the family makes no sense at all and is against the children’s interest. Leaving aside the trauma this decision would have caused, Fatima's* other three children are under 11 years old and cannot remain unaccompanied either," says Oscar Schaible, Humanitarian Affairs Officer on Geo Barents. "Family reunification would have been a long administrative process and another difficult experience for them."
After these intense days of rescues and medical evacuations, the Geo Barents is now heading north to disembark the 249 – soon 248 – children, women and men in a place of safety. Requests for a place of safety have already been sent to Malta, which has not granted them and continues to fail in its duties. The Geo Barents has therefore moved towards the closest subsequent state, Italy, and has started to ask for a port to disembark the survivors. According to the international law and maritime convention, all rescued people must be disembarked as quickly as possible to a place of safety, a location where rescue operations are considered to terminate, where the survivors' safety of life is no longer threatened and where their basic human needs are respected.
“We are asking for a place of safety and the same situation is repeating again and again but this is not another time to play with the survivors on board. They must not be used as political leverage,” says Juan Matias Gil, MSF Search and Rescue Representative. “We are not begging, we are simply asking and calling on Malta and Italy to comply with their legal obligations. Waiting for days, a week or more is not acceptable. Let's stop playing with human lives.”
*names have been changed for anonymity