Previously, two people with serious injuries had to be medically evacuated

At around 12:00 noon on Thursday, the SEA-EYE 5 crew rescued 17 people in the Mediterranean Sea. One person’s condition was so critical that the crew requested a medical evacuation. A helicopter then took this person to hospital in Malta for urgent treatment.

“The health condition of most of the rescued persons was stable; some were seasick. One person had inhaled too much fuel, which caused their blood oxygen level to drop too low. We provided them with oxygen and treated them for dehydration. Their condition was too critical to keep them on board for a longer period of time, so we requested an evacuation,” reports Dr Nour Hanna-Krahl, the emergency doctor from German Doctors on board the SEA-EYE 5.

About three hours after the helicopter operation, the health condition of a second rescued person deteriorated. The crew therefore requested another medical evacuation. An Italian coast guard vessel took the person on board and brought them ashore in Lampedusa so that they could receive immediate medical treatment.

Following the mission, the Italian authorities designated the port of Vibo Valentia for the SEA-EYE 5, located approximately 400 nautical miles from the location of the rescue. After an almost 30-hour journey, the 15 rescued people were able to safely go ashore late Friday evening.

This has been the second rescue operation for the SEA-EYE 5 during this mission. 14 people had been brought to safety on board the all-weather lifeboat on Saturday morning (19 July) and disembarked at the designated port of Reggio Calabria on Sunday evening.

32 organisations demand the immediate ending of the systematic obstruction of non-governmental search and rescue (SAR) efforts by the Italian state. In the past month alone, NGO vessels have been detained three times due to legal restrictions based on allegations under the “Piantedosi decree” – one of them, the monitoring vessel Nadir operated by RESQSHIP, got detained twice in a row. Deliberately keeping non-governmental search and rescue organisations away from the Central Mediterranean causes countless more deaths at sea on one of the deadliest flight routes worldwide.

Despite numerous alerts raised by SAR organisations, NGO vessels continue to be arbitrarily detained since the adoption of the “Piantedosi decree” in January 2023, aggravated by the conversion into law of the “Flussi decree” in December 2024. In the last month, Nadir and Sea-Eye 5, two of the smaller vessels operated by RESQSHIP and Sea-Eye, were detained on accusations of not complying with authorities’ instructions. Both crews were assigned very distant ports and asked for partial transshipments of people based on vulnerability criteria, despite the fact that a proper vulnerability assessment needs a safe environment and can not be conducted aboard a ship and directly after a rescue. 

Implementing legal and administrative obstructions serves an obvious goal: to keep SAR vessels away from their operational areas, drastically restricting their active presence at sea. Without the presence of NGO assets and aircrafts, more people will drown while fleeing across the Central Mediterranean, and human rights violations as well as shipwrecks will occur unnoticed. Smaller vessels play a crucial role: they monitor the route, provide first aid to people on boats in distress and, when necessary, embark the people until the arrival of better-equipped vessels.

Since February 2023, NGO ships have been subjected to 29 detentions, amounting to a total of 700 days in harbours instead of rescuing lives at sea. They spent an additional 822 days at sea navigating to reach assigned ports at unjustifiable distances, amounting to 330,000 kilometres of navigation. What initially only affected non-governmental SAR vessels has now been extended also to smaller monitoring ships.

In addition, NGOs spend a huge amount of time and financial resources appealing Italy’s restrictive legislation and the administrative detentions arbitrarily imposed on them.

In previous months, national courts – in Catanzaro, Reggio Calabria, Crotone, Vibo Valentia, and Ancona – issued decisions recognising the detention of NGO rescue ships at port to be unlawful and, as a consequence, they annulled the related fines. In October 2024, the Brindisi Tribunal asked the Italian Constitutional Court to assess the compatibility of the “Piantedosi decree”, converted into law in February 2023, with the Italian Constitution. On the 8th of July 2025, the Constitutional court re-established that the Law of the Sea cannot be circumvented by punitive and discriminatory norms and any order contrary to it is to be considered illegal and illegitimate.

Non-assistance is a crime!

Under international maritime law, every shipmaster has the obligation to assist persons in distress at sea. Likewise, any state operating a Rescue Coordination Centre is legally bound to facilitate and ensure timely rescue operations. Yet today, what we are witnessing is not a state failure, but a pattern of deliberate violations: withholding information about distress cases, coordinating with the so-called Libyan coast guards for illegal pullbacks – even within Maltese waters – and allowing Frontex aircraft to observe shipwrecks and violent interception without intervening.

These practices are a blatant violation of the SOLAS Convention, the SAR Convention, UNCLOS, and the principle of non-refoulement. When states obstruct rescue activities instead of enabling them, they are not enforcing the law, they are breaking it.

Background

In December 2024, the “Flussi decree” (converted by Law 145/2024) concerning migration and asylum legislation passed by the Italian government came into force. It tightens the already restrictive provisions of the “Piantedosi decree”, ranging from fines to the detention and permanent confiscation of search and rescue vessels . The new provisions facilitate the confiscation of vessels by holding shipowners liable for repeated violations regardless of the captain, and hence represents a further escalation in the targeted obstruction of the work of SAR NGOs in the Central Mediterranean.

Ten years ago, search and rescue NGOs started filling the lethal gap left by the EU and its Member States in the Central Mediterranean. While the EU increasingly focuses on border control and border externalisation to prevent any arrivals of people on the move to European coasts, more than 175.500 people have been rescued by NGO ships since then. Nevertheless, since 2017, SAR actors have been increasingly exposed to criminalisation and systematic obstruction due to restrictive laws and policies, which contradict international maritime law and human rights.

We demand:

  • The immediate repeal of the Piantedosi and Flussi decrees, putting an end to inhumane requests for rescue ships to perform partial disembarkation and stopping the assignment of distant ports. As requested by international maritime law, those who have just been rescued should be disembarked without delay at the closest place of safety; they should not be made to endure long journeys due to political calculations.
  • The immediate release of the monitoring sailing vessel Nadir and the end to the obstruction and criminalization of non-governemental SAR activities.
  • That EU member states fulfil their duty to rescue people at sea and comply with international law. The authorities should provide all NGO ships with the necessary support in the coordination of rescues in order to take their responsibility to assist people in distress.
  • The establishment of a EU-financed and coordinated search and rescue programme.
  • Safe and legal pathways to Europe to prevent people from being forced onto unseaworthy boats and embarking on difficult and sometimes deadly journeys.

Signatories:

  1. Association for Juridical Studies on Immigration (ASGI)
  2. borderline-europe, Human rights without borders e.V.
  3. Captain Support Network
  4. Cilip | Bürgerrechte & Polizei 
  5. CompassCollective
  6. CONVENZIONE DEI DIRITTI NEL MEDITERRANEO 
  7. EMERGENCY
  8. European Center for Constitutional and Human Rights (ECCHR)
  9. Gruppo Melitea 
  10. iuventa-crew
  11. LasciateCIEntrare 
  12. Maldusa project
  13. Médecins Sans Frontières
  14. MEDITERRANEA Saving Humans
  15. MEM.MED Memoria Mediterranea 
  16. migration-control.info project
  17. MV Louise Michel project
  18. Open Arms 
  19. RESQSHIP
  20. r42 Sail And Rescue
  21. Refugees in Libya
  22. Salvamento Marítimo Humanitario (SMH)
  23. SARAH-Seenotrettung 
  24. Sea-Eye
  25. Sea Punks e.V
  26. Sea-Watch
  27. SOS Humanity
  28. SOS MEDITERRANEE
  29. Statewatch
  30. Tunisian Forum for Social and Economic Rights FTDES
  31. United4Rescue 
  32. Watch the Med Alarm Phone

SEA-EYE 5

After being detained for 20 days and after cancelled fundings by the German government, the civil rescue ship returns to the Mediterranean Sea.

Around three weeks after the German government has announced that it was cancelling financial support for civil sea rescue operations, the rescue ship SEA-EYE 5 is once again setting sail for the Mediterranean. Previously, over 80,000 people had petitioned for support to be reinstated in the federal budget.

In a short period of time, many people have shown their solidarity and have allowed the SEA-EYE 5 to set sail again. We are grateful for that! However, this strong signal from civil society contrasts sharply with the attitude of the German government. By joining a brutal EU border regime and therefore withdrawing from responsibility, the government is leaving the rescue of human lives solely to civil sea rescuers and the countries bordering the Mediterranean. With its policy, the German government is making escape routes deadlier and abandoning humanitarian aid organisations. This is no inadvertent political blind flight. It is a wilful breach of fundamental humanitarian values,” explains Gorden Isler, Chairman of Sea-Eye.

“Especially in times like these, we are committed to our cooperation with Sea-Eye and hence to civil sea rescue. By deploying our doctors on board, we are continuing to provide urgently needed medical care for people in distress at sea,” emphasises Dr Christine Winkelmann, Director of Projekte German Doctors e. V.

This is the first mission for the SEA-EYE 5 after a 20-day detention in Pozzallo, Sicily. The Italian authorities had imposed this following the rescue of 65 people. Sea-Eye has already filed a lawsuit against the detention and the associated fine. The organisation has won three lawsuits against unlawful detentions by the Italian authorities in 2024 alone.