Malta lets rescue ship dock after EU states agree to take migrants
VALLETTA: Malta said on Tuesday it would allow the Mediterranean rescue ship Aquarius, which has been barred for four days from several coastal states, to dock after five European Union countries agreed to take in 141 migrants on board.
The boat, run by the Franco-German charity SOS Mediterranee and Doctors without Borders (MSF), had been at the centre of the latest continent-wide tug-of-war over how to cope with the arrival of seaborne migrants.
The migrants, rescued off the coast of Libya, will be distributed among France, Germany, Luxembourg, Portugal and Spain, the Maltese and French governments said.
Sixty of 114 migrants who had been brought to Malta separately on Monday will go to other EU member states.
The charities gave a cautious welcome to the deal, saying EU states now needed to agree on a more permanent mechanism that would avoid seeing rescue ships stranded at sea for days.
“Maybe European states have finally understood that this concerns our common border at the south of Europe, that this is a problem for the 28 member states, and that we can’t avoid responsibility and should work together,” Frederic Penard, director of operations at SOS Mediterranee, told a news conference.
Spain will take 60 of the migrants, Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez tweeted. Portugal said it would take 30 from the Aquarius and other boats that had arrived in Malta. France said it would take in 60.