Yahoo – AFP,
Ella IDE, April 19, 2017
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| Migrants are rescued off the coast of Libya by SOS Mediterranee's Aquarius vessel in May 2016 (AFP Photo/GABRIEL BOUYS) |
Rome (AFP)
- UNESCO awarded its prestigious peace prize on Wednesday to migrant rescue
association SOS Mediterranee and the mayor of Lampedusa, the tiny Italian
island on the frontline of the refugee crisis.
The Felix
Houphouet-Boigny Peace Prize goes to the European NGO and mayor Giuseppina
Nicolini "for their work to save the lives of refugees and migrants and
welcome them with dignity," the UN cultural body said in a statement.
The plight
of migrants constitutes "one of the crucial issues of our day, notably in
the Mediterranean where nearly 13,000 men, women and children have perished in
shipwrecks since 2013," said acting jury head Joaquim Chissano, former
president of Mozambique.
Lampedusa,
Italy's most southerly outpost, was the first port of arrival for thousands of
migrants setting off from North Africa in the first years of the crisis, which
began in 2011 and has developed into the worst since World War II.
SOS
Mediterranee, founded in 2015, rescues hundreds of men, women and children each
week from flimsy dinghies and boats in the Mediterranean, along with other
NGOs.
Nicolini
was recognised for "her boundless humanity and unwavering commitment to
refugee crisis management and integration in response to the arrival of
thousands of refugees on the shores of Lampedusa and elsewhere in Italy".
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The mayor
of Lampedusa, Giuseppina Nicolini, has been recognised for her
work at the
frontline of the refugee crisis (AFP Photo/ANDREAS SOLARO)
|
'Watery
grave'
"I
dedicate this prize to all those who did not make it across the sea because
they were swallowed up, and also to Gabriele Del Grande," said Nicolini,
referring to an Italian journalist arrested in Turkey this month while
researching the lives of Syrian refugees.
"He
was the first to count the Mediterranean's dead on a website, back when nobody
even knew people were dying in the Mediterranean. He is now a prisoner in
Turkey," she said, calling on the government to "bring him
home".
The jury
said SOS Mediterranee's Aquarius vessel, co-run by Doctors Without Borders, had
saved more than 11,000 lives since it began search and rescue missions off
Lampedusa in early 2016.
"We're
so happy to be given this award together with Nicolini. We visited her when we
were starting up and she said 'you are crazy but I am with you, because this is
what we need after the failures of the EU'," said Sophie Beau, SOS
Mediterranee co-founder.
The jury
appealed to the international community "to ensure that the Mediterranean
sea becomes, once again, a place where solidarity and intercultural dialogue
hold sway, and that it ceases to serve as a watery grave".
Private
rescue vessels sounded the alarm this weekend over the "unprecedented mass
rescues" of people fleeing horrors in conflict-torn Libya, recovering
seven bodies including that of an eight-year-old, and warning more migrants
risked drowning without EU action.
Close to
37,000 people have been brought to safety in Italy so far this year, a 45
percent increase on the same period in 2016.
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Migrants
waiting to disembark from the Aquarius which has saved more than
11,000 lives
since early 2016, the jury said (AFP Photo/Giovanni ISOLINO)
|
Solidarity
The EU's
border control agency Frontex has accused donor-funded vessels of doing more
harm than good by acting "like taxis" off Libya and tempting human
traffickers to put as many people as possible out to sea in flimsy vessels.
Italian
prosecutors have suggested they may have links with traffickers and in March
named SOS Mediterranee's activity as being of interest to investigators, along
with other private rescue vessels.
Their
charges have been fiercely rejected by the NGOs, with SOS Mediterranee saying
Wednesday it had "never, not once" been put in contact with migrants
via smugglers.
"European
governments need to show more solidarity to the humanitarian organisations that
are working on the front line of this humanitarian crisis. Border control is not
the solution," said Regina Catrambone, the director of MOAS rescue
service.
UNESCO's
Felix Houphouet-Boigny Peace Prize, created in 1989 to honour those making a
significant contribution to peace, has gone in the past to Nelson Mandela,
Israel's Shimon Peres and the late Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat, King Juan
Carlos of Spain and former US president Jimmy Carter.



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