Responsibilities
The TMIS editorial contrasts the Preca canonisation ceremony at the Vatican with the way "Malta’s name has been shamed all over the civilised world this past week". It questions why we seem to find it so difficult to think outside the legal box. Meanwhile, The IHT reports that an EU immigration official has criticized Malta for failing to meet its international responsibilities to save lives at sea:
..Commissioner Franco Frattini, in charge of migration issues, said he wanted a formal undertaking from the island at a meeting of EU interior ministers on June 11 that it would not allow such an incident to take place again. "The obligation to save lives at sea comes from international tradition that no country has ever violated in such a manifest way," Frattini told La Repubblica, an Italian newspaper. Last week, 27 shipwrecked Africans spent three days clinging to tuna nets in the Mediterranean while Malta and Libya argued over who should rescue them. They were eventually picked up by the Italian Navy.More immigrants landed
A French Navy ship found 18 bodies floating south of Malta on Friday just days after the Maltese authorities said they had lost contact with a boat that was photographed carrying 53 African migrants. The frigate, La Motte-Piquet, was due Sunday to dock in the French port of Toulon and be met by the French immigration minister, Brice Hortefeux.
Malta refused to allow a Spanish tugboat to land another 26 would-be migrants on the grounds that they were picked up in seas that fall under Libya's responsibility. Spain decided to take them in. Malta argues it is not obliged under international law to take in migrants if they are in Libya's search and rescue area, but Frattini accused the country, one of the EU's newest and smallest members, of ignoring its responsibilities. "You can't hide behind a type of legal-bureaucratic argument while letting people die," Frattini said. Frattini said the EU was providing help, including a marine patrol force around Malta, Sicily and Libya to be launched later this month, and Malta had to do its part in return.
The Council of Europe, a pan-European body that works to promote human rights, also criticized the Valletta government. The council's human rights commissioner, Thomas Hammarberg, said his office would "urge the Maltese authorities to soften their stance on providing assistance to irregular migrants whose lives are in danger." A Maltese patrol boat recovered 29 migrants Saturday from a boat drifting 135 kilometers, or 84 miles, off the island's coast. On Friday, the Maltese home affairs minister, Tonio Borg, told The Times, a Maltese newspaper, that the island was doing all it could...







Post a Comment
Links to this post:
Create a Link
<< Home