Thousands of Children Expected to Die In Mediterranean This Year

Read Time:2 Minute, 35 Second

By Save the Children, Special for  USDR

 

If current trends continue, 2,500 children could die in the Mediterranean this year unless politicians immediately restart rescue operations, Save the Children  warns.

The charity is calling on European Union leaders meeting in Brussels Thursday to agree to restart search and rescue operations off the coast of Italy within 48 hours, on the scale of the previous Mare Nostrum  operation.

Carolyn Miles, President and CEO of Save the Children, says: “EU leaders hold the lives of thousands of desperate people in their hands when they meet tomorrow. With every day that they prevaricate and delay restarting search and rescue operations, the risk grows that more people will die as they try to reach  Europe.

“We cannot allow 2015 to be the deadliest year in the Mediterranean yet. We must get agreement at Thursday’s meeting to scale search and rescue back up to 2014 levels.  Even one boat that sinks is one too many, but the escalating number of people dying offItaly’s shores brings home the urgent need to  act.”

In the latest news from Sunday’s tragedy, which saw approximately 820 people drown when their boat sank, Save the Children staff in Italy have learned that 60 adolescents were on  board.

Four boys who said they were under the age of 18 survived the journey and are staying in a building used as reception center for children in  Italy.

Gemma Parkin, on the ground in Sicily with Save the Children, says: “Children arriving off the boats are exhausted and traumatised from the ordeal they have been through, not just at sea but also during their long and dangerous land journeys. But they also tell us they are grateful to be alive and in a safe place – they know they are the lucky  ones.”

The charity has been responding to the needs of children arriving in Lampedusa, Sicily, Calabria and Apulia and is deeply concerned at the reports of violence they have experienced and witnessed in  Libya.

It is critical to not only restart search and rescue operations, but to make sure vulnerable migrants – especially unaccompanied minors and families arriving with children – receive the support they  need.

Notes to  editors:

  • The 2,500 figure is based on IOM’s projection that 30,000 migrants could die in the Mediterranean this year. We know that 8.3% of arrivals are children, so assuming children die at a similar rate to adults, that would mean to 2490 children could die in 2015 (i.e. 30,000 x 8.3%).
  • Save the Children is calling for a commitment to establish and deploy a search-and-rescue mission of at least equivalent size, capability and mandate to Mare Nostrum within five days. This would include:
  • A budget of at least EUR £9 million per month and at least 900 personnel
  • A comparable fleet to Mare Nostrum, including large vessels capable of traversing and making rescues in rough seas with facilities for on-the-scene medical treatment
  • A clear mandate to provide search-and-rescue across the whole Central Mediterranean area

 

SOURCE Save the  Children

 

Happy
Happy
0 %
Sad
Sad
0 %
Excited
Excited
0 %
Sleepy
Sleepy
0 %
Angry
Angry
0 %
Surprise
Surprise
0 %
Videos