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v2.1.5209.produswest2
Journal Article
|Commentary

Migrants caught between tides and politics in the Mediterranean: an imperative for search and rescue at sea?

Zamatto F, Argenziano S, Arsenijević J, Ponthieu A, Bertotto M, Di Donna F, Harries AD, Zachariah R
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Summary Points
- In the late 2014, owing to lack of European Union support, the Italian state retreated from their Mare Nostrum—a proactive ‘Search and Rescue’ (SAR) operation in the central Mediterranean leaving thousands to die at sea.

- Humanitarian Non-Governmental Organisations (NGOs) including Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) stepped in to fill this gap but have been recently accused of being a ‘pull factor’ for migrants and refugees and being a cause for deterioration in maritime safety by increasing deaths at sea.

- Contrary to the pull factor hypothesis, the number of sea arrivals during the NGO involvement period (with proactive SAR operations) was lower than during equivalent prior periods. Mortality rates were also substantially lower during the NGO period compared with similar prior periods.

- These findings strongly support arguments that SAR operations by humanitarian NGOs reduce mortality risks and have little or no effect on the number of arrivals.

Subject Area

displaced populationsmigration

Collections

Medical and humanitarian harms of restrictive European migration policies

Languages

English
DOI
10.1136/bmjgh-2017-000450
Published Date
14 Sep 2017
PubMed ID
29225947
Journal
BMJ Global Health
Volume | Issue | Pages
Volume 2, Issue 3, Pages e000450
Issue Date
2017-09-01
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Migrants caught between tides and politics in the Mediterranean: an imperative for search and rescue at sea? | Journal Article / Commentary | MSF Science Portal