Bush/Blair legacy continues
Rescuers
Unable to Help 31 Refugees Who Drowned Due to Laws
Preventing People Smuggling
Lifesavers were in international waters while the
sinking boat was stranded on the Turkish side of the
sea
By John Hall
January 27, 2016 "Information
Clearing House"
-
"The
Independent" -
At least 31 refugees drowned in the Aegean
Sea after rescue workers stationed nearby were
initially left unable to assist them until
the boat had left Turkish waters.
Australian national Simon Lewis says he and a
team of rescue workers were sailing in international
waters near the Greek island of Lesbos when they
heard reports of a refugee boat nearby.
Because the boat was still in Turkish waters at
the time, Mr Lewis’ crew were not dispatched to the
scene and were therefore not in a position to help
when the vessel subsequently started to sink,
leaving 31 people dead.
Had the vessel made it into international waters
before sinking then rescue workers could have
approached them and helped.
Volunteer observes silence as baby girl
washes up on beach
“That's the nature of lifesaving, we put
ourselves in that situation to help prevent people
from drowning and yet because it's across the way in
international water you're restricted and can't
actually do anything about it,” Mr Lewis told
Australia’s
ABC News.
Maritime law states that refugees must cross
borders under their own steam and that anybody
assisting them in doing so by piloting or towing
vessels could be charged with people smuggling.
Due to these rules, rescue workers usually assess
refugee boats from a distance while waiting for them
to cross maritime borders unaided.
Should the initial assessment reveal that the
boat is taking on water or presenting a threat to
the refugees’ lives, then lifesavers would not delay
intervention.
Mr Lewis described reports in Australia that his
team had simply stood by and watched as refugees a
boatload died in front of them as having been “hyped
up”.
Mr Lewis revealed that
he had been inspired to help refugees after
seeing harrowing photographs of Syrian
toddler Alan al-Kurdi washed up on a Turkish
beach last year
Speaking to The Independent, he said: “We didn’t
actually have 31 people drown right in front of
us…Their boat was either going to come towards us or
come towards [the Greek island village] Skala.”
“The [people smuggling] rules may still apply but
what lifesaver would not [intervene]?,” he added.
Mr Lewis also spoke of a separate incident in
which he thought a desperate refugee mother was
considering throwing her baby into the sea in the
hope rescuers would have no choice but to dive in
and save its life.
“This was an inflatable boat crammed with people
and we were kind of near the boat as we intercepted
it. The mother turned and went to pass us her child
and we were like ‘oh f***’ - because we knew what
she was doing.”
“So we pulled away and she was just like ‘why
don’t you want my child?’… the look on her face; she
stared me in the eye like we’d just broken her
heart,” he added.
“We realised exactly what she was about to do so
we just pulled away. We had to make that snap call
knowing that she was about to drop the kid in the
ocean and push it towards us,” Mr Lewis said.
Had the mother dropped the child into the sea,
the risk to the child and any rescue worker who went
in after it would have been immense.
Thankfully the sinking vessel was subsequently
escorted to shore by Mr Lewis’ team with no loss of
life.
Mr Lewis, who went to Greece as part of a joint
venture between the Greek Lifeguards and the
International Surf Lifesaving Association, said his
team were able to save the lives of 517 people in
just 10 days. He estimates 2,000 refugees passed
through the waters in that time.
He also revealed that he had been inspired to
help refugees after seeing harrowing photographs of
Syrian toddler Aylan Kurdi washed up on a Turkish
beach last year.
“I didn’t
go there for any political reason,” he said. “I
didn’t go there for anything other than I’m a life
guard and I saw the image of the infant that drowned
and I realised that I’ve got this unique set of work
skills, so I asked myself ‘why am I not going to
this crisis?’.”
“I couldn’t
answer that question but in a way I just felt I had
no excuse. So I just went ‘yep, I’m going – I’m
going to go there and I’m going to try and help’, so
I just volunteered.”
Upon
returning to Australia, Mr Lewis ran a crowd-funding
campaign which raised A$22,000 to pay for a rescue
jet ski which Greek lifeguards will use to help them
reach stricken refugees more speedily. |