In this photo taken on Wednesday, Jan. 16, 2019 the Sea-Watch rescue ship sails through the Mediterranean Sea. A private rescue boat with dozens of migrants aboard sought permission for a second day to enter a safe port Sunday, but said so far its queries to several nations haven't succeeded. Another vessel crowded with panicking migrants and taking on water, meanwhile, put out an urgent, separate appeal for help in the southern Mediterranean. Sea-Watch 3, run by a German NGO, said Sunday it has contacted Italy, Malta, Libya as well as the Netherlands, since the boat is Dutch-flagged, asking where it can bring the 47 migrants it had taken aboard. Sea-Watch tweeted that Libyan officials had hung up when it asked for a port assignment. (Jon Stone/Sea-Watch via AP) [CopyrightNotice: Jon Stone/Sea-Watch.org]
La nave Sea Watch è entrata nelle acque territoriali italiane ed è ancorata ad un miglio a largo delle coste di Siracusa. L’ingresso, secondo quanto si apprende dalla Guardia Costiera italiana, è stato consentito a causa delle cattive condizioni meteo per garantire la sicurezza dei 47 migranti che si trovano a bordo, ormai da sette giorni, e della stessa imbarcazione. La Sea Watch è affiancata da motovedette della Guardia Costiera e della Guardia di Finanza.