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27 migrants are suffering from 'serious' psychological conditions after being stuck on an oil tanker for 6 weeks because no country would take them

Mia Jankowicz   

27 migrants are suffering from 'serious' psychological conditions after being stuck on an oil tanker for 6 weeks because no country would take them
  • An oil tanker owned by shipping company Maersk Tankers rescued 27 migrants off the coast of Malta on August 4, the company said.
  • After this, the ship — whose supplies began running out — was unable to dock anywhere, prompting Maersk Tankers to launch formal appeals to governments.
  • On September 6, three of the migrants jumped overboard in desperation, and left a note thanking the captain but saying: "European[s] don't need us." (They ultimately survived the leap.)
  • On September 11, the migrants were transferred from the tanker to a humanitarian vessel, and are now in "serious" psychological condition, according to nonprofit Mediterranea.
  • So far, no country is letting them in still. An ongoing international standoff about where they can reach dry land continues.

Twenty-seven migrants are suffering "serious" physical and psychological effects after being stuck on an oil tanker for six weeks, a humanitarian nonprofit has said.

The migrants, who were picked up by the Maersk Etienne as their rickety boat sank in early August, had been adrift because no country allowed the tanker to dock with the migrants on board.

Supplies on the ship had been running low, and the vessel had warned that the situation was unsustainable. In early September three of the migrants threw themselves overboard in desperation.

The three were rescued again, but their jump — and their heartfelt notes written to the captain before they did so — were read as a cry for help.

On Friday, all 27 migrants were transferred to the Mare Jonio rescue ship, according to tweets from Maersk Tankers, the company that operates the Etienne, and humanitarian group Mediterranea Rescue, which operates the rescue ship.

Maersk Etienne is scheduled to dock at a "suitable port" and get the crew "the care they need," Maersk Tankers said in a statement.

The migrants, meanwhile, are in "serious psycho-physical conditions," Mediterranea Rescue said.

A tale of three boats

On August 4, Maersk Etienne responded to an urgent request from Maltese authorities to rescue a group of migrants in distress, according to Maersk Tankers.

As soon as the group was rescued, their ramshackle vessel disintegrated, the company said.

From this point on, the tanker was overcrowded and unable to dock.

Much of the European Union falls within the Schengen area, a zone that requires a visa for many countries.

But the migrants' nationalities are unclear, and it is unknown whether they planned to claim asylum in a country or were attempting undocumented economic migration.

Many European countries — including Italy, one of the easiest coasts to reach from the Mediterranean Sea — have taken an increasingly hard line on migration from outside the bloc since migrants and refugee numbers peaked in 2015.

Prior to the 27 migrants' transfer on Friday, the ship stayed around 20 miles off the east coast of Malta, according to Marine Traffic, a website that tracks shipping movements in real time.

'They just simply want to step ashore'

Tanker and cargo vessels have small crews — on average around 23, according to Deloitte — and limited habitable space.

With 27 extra people, the ship's population had more than doubled. Among the migrants are a pregnant woman and a child, according to the company.

"The merchant fleet is neither designed nor equipped to care for additional people, and we are quickly depleting the supplies onboard," Tommy Thomassen, Chief Technical Officer at Maersk Tankers, said in an August 19 statement.

"Unfortunately the frustration of these people is rising day by day," Captain Volodymyr Yeroshkin also said in a video statement published by the company.

"They are anxious to do some work. They are anxious to get in touch with their loved ones and families. They just simply want to step ashore," he said.

Large parts of the vessel are also dangerous to those who are not trained to work on ships. The migrants were allocated a safe area of the ship with basic sleeping and shelter arrangements.

But supplies were running low, and the company said the situation was unsustainable.

'European[s] don't need us alive'

In this situation, some of the migrants appeared to have lost hope.

According to Yeroshkin, the captain, one of the migrants told him that they felt the crew didn't deserve the situation they were in, and warned that he might jump overboard.

"We had a difficult time to convince him [not] to jump overboard," Yeroshkin said. "So this just gives a picture of how desperate these people are. We really require immediate assistance."

It is unclear if this person was among the three who eventually did jump on September 6.

One of those who jumped left a heartbreaking note for the captain, saying he is their "hero" but there is "no solution for us."

"We will go back to the water by any way possible," read the note. "European[s] don't need us alive."

What next?

Maersk Tankers appealed to governments to address the situation, which was becoming an international standoff between European governments and Tunisia.

Though the migrants have now transferred off the tanker, it is unclear what their next steps will be, or how — and where — they can reach dry land.

"International law and maritime conventions place clear obligations on responsible governments to ensure people in distress are promptly disembarked," Maersk Tankers said in aSeptember 9 statement.

The European Community Shipowners' Associations and the European Transport Workers' Federation — a trade organization and a union, respectively — wrote to the EU Commissioner and Vice President calling the situation a "humanitarian crisis," according to shipping news site All About Shipping.

In a series of tweets, Human Rights Watch head Kenneth Roth wrote that the migrants had been in European waters when they were first spotted by Maltese authorities, but had drifted to Tunisian waters by the time they were picked up.

Roth suggested this situation means the migrants are the EU's responsibility, and that the bloc was "pretending" that the responsibility is with Tunisia.

While this is not the first time a merchant ship has rescued migrant boats, Business Insider understands this is the longest time a vessel has ever spent in legal "limbo" due to a rescue.

The situation comes amid a yearslong migrant crisis at the borders of Europe, sparked by the civil war in Syria, whose refugee numbers have only added to migrants from other countries.

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