Germany to stop funding sea rescue charities

The German government is planning to stop funding Mediterranean sea rescue charities after being slammed by Italy over the issue, the popular Bild daily reported on Friday (6 October).

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The 'Ocean Viking', the SOS Mediterranee ship that rescued 439 migrants between Lampedusa and Tunisia, arrives in the port of Naples, Italy, 28 August 2023. [EPA-EFE/CIRO FUSCO]

Euractiv.com with AFP 07-10-2023 06:57 2 min. read Content type: News Service Euractiv is part of the Trust Project

The German government is planning to stop funding Mediterranean sea rescue charities after being slammed by Italy over the issue, the popular Bild daily reported on Friday (6 October).

Germany's 2023 budget allocated two million euros in funding to sea rescue charities but there is no such mention of them in the draft budget for 2024, Bild reported.

This was "not an oversight", it said, citing sources in the German parliament's budget committee.

The chancellery and the foreign ministry are both in favour of cancelling the funding, Bild said.

Neither institution was immediately available for comment.

Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni recently wrote a letter of complaint to German Chancellor Olaf Scholz to express her "amazement" about Berlin funding charities helping irregular migrants arrive in her country.

Asked about the letter, Berlin confirmed that it was providing between €400,000 and €800,000 each to two projects relating to migrants.

At a press conference last week following talks with her Italian counterpart, Germany's Foreign Minister Annalena Baerbock defended Berlin's backing of rescue missions.

"Volunteer sea rescuers have a life-saving task in the Mediterranean," she said.

However, at an EU summit in Granada on Friday, Scholz took a different tone.

Asked about the funds at a press conference, Scholz stressed they had been approved by parliament and not by the government.

"I did not make the proposal," he said. When asked what his personal opinion was on the matter, he added: "That is the opinion I have, that I did not make the proposal. And I think that is also unequivocal."

The Granada summit was dominated by a row over planned changes to Europe's migration rules.

Poland, Hungary stand alone in opposing EU migration reform

Poland and Hungary blocked a symbolic EU statement about migration on Friday (6 October) but other leaders at a summit in Spain said they were continuing overhauling the bloc's rules for handling irregular arrivals anyway.

Poland and Hungary prevented the leaders from referring to migration in a joint statement, although supporters of the reform vowed it would not be derailed.

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