Italian navy says it will continue refugee rescue mission despite plan to scrap it

http://www.theguardian.com/world/2014/oct/28/italian-navy-refugee-rescue-mission-mare-nostrum

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The Italian navy will continue a search and rescue mission which has saved the lives of an estimated 150,000 refugees because no order has been received from the Italian government to stop.

Confusion now surrounds the future of the Mare Nostrum programme as a decision has already been taken to replace it with a more limited scheme from 1 November.

But Admiral Filippo Maria Foffi, the navy’s commander-in-chief, told a conference in Brussels that the Italian navy had no intention of standing down, and hinted at a division within the Italian government on the issue.

“We didn’t receive any signed order saying we were going to finish operations on 1 November,” Foffi said. “Mare Nostrum is working exactly as we worked in the last year and we are not passing on our activity to someone else. Today I am responsible and I think tomorrow I will also be responsible. Something could change but there is no official evidence that at the end of October we will finish.”

Pressed on a statement by the rightwing interior minister, Angelino Alfano, about the imminent demise of Mare Nostrum, Foffi said that he received the prime minister’s orders through the defence minister and reacting to Alfano’s statement was “not the way that military men conduct their activities”.

“We are still waiting for orders from our government,” Antonio Dell’Anna, an Italian navy spokesman in Rome, added. “Mare Nostrum is not finished yet. We will fulfil our mission until the end.”

Mare Nostrum’s demise had seemed certain after the launch of a more limited “Triton” scheme was announced for 1 November. This will be confined to a 30-mile zone around Italy’s coastal waters, possess a third of Mare Nostrum’s maritime capacities, and be coordinated through the EU-funded Frontex agency.

But campaigners noted that any decision to terminate Mare Nostrum would have to be taken by a council of Italian ministers, and the issue has not yet been formally put on any meeting agenda.

Christopher Hein, the director of the Italian Council for Refugees, suggested that the Italian prime minister and defence minister were at odds with their interior minister over the programme’s continuation.

“We have recent pronunciations from the prime minister and the defence minister that go in a different direction from Alfano, who is also head of a small rightwing party that worked with Berlusconi until the day before yesterday and so has to keep his people quiet,” he said.

A “phasing out” of the current programme, announced by the government, could take many years, he added.

The Mare Nostrum project is an Italian military mission that received about €30m from the European commission after the Lampedusa tragedy. No further funding applications have so far been received from Rome.

The UK Foreign Office stirred ire in Brussels on Tuesday when it announced that it would not participate in any future operations, because of their “pulling factor” in encouraging economic migrants to set sail for Europe.

An estimated 2,500 people are known to have died this year while making the perilous trip across the Mediterranean Sea.

Foffi said refugees’ journeys typically started three months before arrival at the shores of north Africa, and involved hardships that saw around half of the travellers die. He added: “If someone is speaking about a ‘pulling factor’, he doesn’t know what he is speaking about.”

Agencies say asylum applications in Europe are up 30% this year to a new record, because of conflicts in places such as Syria, Libya and Eritrea. But this only represents 8% of the world’s 51 million refugees, according to the UNHCR, and within Europe most eventually disembark in Germany, Sweden and Hungary.

Michael Diedring, the secretary general of the European Council for Refugees, said the Foreign Office argument was “morally shocking” as more than half of those saved under the Mare Nostrum programme had been fleeing war and persecution in Libya and Eritrea.

“It is as if you walk by a river and see a child being pulled away by the current and think: ‘I’ll let the child drown because then the other kids will know that they shouldn’t fall into the river. Hopefully, most of us would jump in or pick up a branch to save the child. It’s basic humanity.”

Tineke Strik, the rapporteur for the Council of Europe’s parliamentary assembly, said the UK announcement would be damaging for the UK’s reputation in Europe “as far as it can become any worse”.

“I think it is incredible, actually. It shows that they are turning their backs on the horrible problems in the Mediterranean Sea. It is not just something to regret but to be very angry about,” she said.