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Mediterranean search and rescue: A moment of light - Maurizio Debann

05 Oct 23

Mediterranean search and rescue: A moment of light - Maurizio Debann

On 24 March 2023, our team was busy welcoming the newly rescued people who had joined Geo Barents and helping them settle on board. Caption
On 24 March 2023, our team was busy welcoming the newly rescued people who had joined Geo Barents and helping them settle on board.

17 April  2023

Maurizio Debanne has recently returned from the Mediterranean, where he was part of the MSF team rescuing people as they escape from often appalling conditions in Libya. He shares his experience.

On 17 March 2023, the Geo Barents team conducted a refresher training before heading to the search and rescue zone. Training includes both theoretical and practical exercises that are essential for the newly formed team to operate efficiently together and save people in distress in the deadliest migration route in the world. Caption
On 17 March 2023, the Geo Barents team conducted a refresher training before heading to the search and rescue zone. Training includes both theoretical and practical exercises that are essential for the newly formed team to operate efficiently together and save people in distress in the deadliest migration route in the world.

"We can choose the trainings we do. But you never get to choose the rescues you’ll be part of."

This was the first sentence, spoken by a member of the search and rescue team during a training exercise, that I carved in my mind.

I was recently on assignment on the Geo Barents, the search and rescue ship operated by Médecins Sans Frontières / Doctors Without Borders (MSF) in the Mediterranean Sea. I had to prepare as best I could, knowing, but above all accepting, that we could expect anything.

On 17 March 2023, the Geo Barents team conducted a refresher training before heading to the search and rescue zone. Training includes both theoretical and practical exercises that are essential for the newly formed team to operate efficiently together and save people in distress in the deadliest migration route in the world. Caption
On 17 March 2023, the Geo Barents team conducted a refresher training before heading to the search and rescue zone. Training includes both theoretical and practical exercises that are essential for the newly formed team to operate efficiently together and save people in distress in the deadliest migration route in the world.

In the first few days we simulated rescues, training for what would happen if we had people in the water without life jackets, heavily pregnant women with hypothermia, and unconscious children who needed to be resuscitated.

"The boat was swaying. All it would have taken was one wrong manoeuvre. All it would have taken was for the Geo Barents not to be there."

MAURIZIO DEBANN
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FIELD COMMUNICATIONS MANAGER, MSF SEARCH AND RESCUE

On the night of my first rescue, there were no children or women. There were only men, many of them barefoot. All with sodden clothes, from trousers to jackets. They had been at sea for 24 hours. Having left Libya, they were travelling on a fishing boat that was literally adrift on the sea. There were dozens of people, even on the roof of the cabin. The boat was swaying. All it would have taken was one wrong manoeuvre. All it would have taken was for the Geo Barents not to be there.

On 24 March 2023, following an alert by the Alarm Phone, a rescue of 190 people was performed during the night. The Geo Barents arrived after Louise Michel had stabilised the boat in distress and distributed life jackets. 190 people, have been rescued and are now safely aboard Geo Barents Caption
On 24 March 2023, following an alert by the Alarm Phone, a rescue of 190 people was performed during the night. The Geo Barents arrived after Louise Michel had stabilised the boat in distress and distributed life jackets. 190 people, have been rescued and are now safely aboard Geo Barents

The day after the rescue, what was striking was the long orderly queue of people waiting for medical consultations. For months and years, no one had offered them care. Seeing a doctor can be a rebirth. Someone who listens to you, who puts their hands on you only to heal you.

"Seeing a doctor can be a rebirth. Someone who listens to you, who puts their hands on you only to heal you."

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As a team member onboard the ship, you enter the lives of the people on board in different ways. Firstly, just by talking...

Ahmed*, just over 30 years old, comes from Homs, Syria. For years he worked in Africa. I meet him one night, on the deck of the Geo Barents. He approaches me, trying to catch my eye. I smile. It is obvious that he wants to talk.

On 24 March 2023, our team was busy welcoming the newly rescued people who had joined Geo Barents and helping them settle on board. Caption
On 24 March 2023, our team was busy welcoming the newly rescued people who had joined Geo Barents and helping them settle on board.

Ahmed tells me his story in French. At the Libya chapter, words suddenly become scarce: he shows me a wound on his arm. A pause. And he resumes: “I was intercepted twice at sea by the Libyan coastguard, and forced to go back to Libya. Now I am happy, merci”.

I tell him to get some rest, it's one o'clock in the morning. He turns away, towards the stern. Ten minutes later, he’s back. This time his gaze is worried.

‘Lumière, lumière, s'il te plaît vien à voir la lumière’. Light, light, please, come and see the light.

Initially I think he’s asking me to turn off the few lights we leave on the bridge at night. He takes me all the way to the back of the boat, where you can look out to sea. A small group of us stare into the darkness, and in then I see the light. It flashes.

On 17 March 2023, the Geo Barents team conducted a refresher training before heading to the search and rescue zone. Training includes both theoretical and practical exercises that are essential for the newly formed team to operate efficiently together and save people in distress in the deadliest migration route in the world. Caption
On 17 March 2023, the Geo Barents team conducted a refresher training before heading to the search and rescue zone. Training includes both theoretical and practical exercises that are essential for the newly formed team to operate efficiently together and save people in distress in the deadliest migration route in the world.

"Is it the Libyans? Are we in danger?" asks Ahmed. I tell him that it’s ok, it’s just a light. He can relax, no one will take him back. But he insists. He asks me to give him my word. I put my hand on his shoulder and tell him without hesitation: 'Tu es dans un lieu sûr, demain on serait à Bari'.

You are in a safe place. Tomorrow we will be in Bari.

Another way we can enter a rescued person’s life is through our offer to recharge mobile phones. Each time I unplug a fully charged phone to return it to its owner, the phone lights up for a few seconds, and children, siblings, parents appear on the screen. Technically these images are screensavers, but actually they are lives. Lives that have entered mine.

Fair wind Geo Barents.

*Name changed

 

MSF has been running search and rescue activities in the central Mediterranean since 2015, working on eight different search and rescue vessels, alone or in partnership with other NGOs. Since 2015, MSF teams have provided lifesaving assistance to more than 85,000 people in distress at sea. MSF relaunched search and rescue activities in the central Mediterranean in May 2021, chartering its own ship, Geo Barents, to rescue people in distress, to provide emergency medical care to rescued people, and to amplify the voices of survivors of the world’s deadliest sea crossing. Since May 2021, the MSF team on board Geo Barents has rescued over 6,500 people.