Latest Mediterranean drowning demands ‘courageous’ response from EU leaders

Reacting to yesterday’s news that almost 150 people have drowned in the Mediterranean and around the same number have been returned to Libya by the Libyan Coastguard, where they risk indefinite detention, Massimo Moratti, Research Director for Europe at Amnesty International, said:

If reports that 150 people have drowned are confirmed this represents the highest death toll from a shipwreck in the Mediterranean this year

Massimo Moratti, Research Director for Europe at Amnesty International

“If reports that 150 people have drowned are confirmed this represents the highest death toll from a shipwreck in the Mediterranean this year.

“This high number represents a new low for European leaders. They have done everything they can to pull up the drawbridge to Europe; withdrawing Search and Rescue Operations; criminalising NGO rescue boats; cooperating with the Libyan coastguard, and yet people are still risking their lives to come to Europe.

“Despite the increasingly risky journey and the unspeakable obstacles, people attempting the crossing to Europe demonstrate enormous hope in a better future and enormous courage to make it happen. We need to see European leaders show some courage too and shift their approach to a humane one which saves lives and doesn’t condemn those who survive to detention in Libya.”

For more information or to arrange an interview, contact Amnesty International press office on [email protected]+32 2 548 27 73 or +32 483 680 812