×

Danish Ship Rescues 113 Migrants In Italy

  The world’s leading container shipping company Danish Maersk Line on Saturday said one of its vessels rescued 113 migrants off the coast of southern … Continue reading Danish Ship Rescues 113 Migrants In Italy


This handout picture taken on June 22, 2018 off the coast of Libya and received from the German NGO “Mission Lifeline” shows migrants boarding a container ship of Danish shipping company Maersk Line after they were rescued from a shipwrecked vessel at sea. Five migrants died and nearly 200 were rescued off the coast of Libya while trying to cross the Mediterranean to Europe in two boats, the Libyan navy said on June 23, 2018. Italy said that it would seize two rescue migrant ships, adding that they were “illegally” flying the Dutch flag. The ships Lifeline and Seefuchs, of the German NGO Mission Lifeline and Sea Eye, “will be seized by the Italian government and directed into our ports” to launch an investigation into their legal status, announced Italy’s infrastructure minister Danilo Toninelli. Danilo CAMPAILLA / Mission Lifeline e. V. / AFP
This handout picture taken on June 22, 2018 off the coast of Libya and received from the German NGO “Mission Lifeline” shows migrants boarding a container ship of Danish shipping company Maersk Line after they were rescued from a shipwrecked vessel at sea. 
Danilo CAMPAILLA / Mission Lifeline e. V. / AFP

 

The world’s leading container shipping company Danish Maersk Line on Saturday said one of its vessels rescued 113 migrants off the coast of southern Italy. 

The container ship called Alexander Maersk changed its course after picking up a distress signal  early Friday, Mikkel Elbek Linnet, spokesman at Maersk Line, told AFP.

He did not specify where exactly the migrants were rescued.

The vessel is currently situated off the coast of the Sicilian town of Pozzallo and awaiting instructions from the Italian Maritime Rescue Coordination Centre (MRCC Rome).

The Maersk container’s move to rescue the migrants is part of “an ancient code of conduct,” according to Linnet.

“It’s not the first time… they have picked up migrants two or three times before in recent years,” he told AFP.

Italy’s new populist government has threatened to seize several other ships carrying migrants, sparking a row with the EU.

Infrastructure minister Danilo Toninelli on Thursday said that two rescue migrant ships — Lifeline, run by the German NGO Mission Lifeline, and Seefuchs, run by the German NGO Sea-Eye, — would be seized and directed to Italian ports for investigation “into their legal status”.

AFP