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Germany says NGO sea rescue funding planned through 2026

October 7, 2023

Germany's Foreign Ministry says the country will donate money to migrant rescue boat charities operating in the Mediterranean. This followed media reports saying it would be axed, amid no mention in next year's budget.

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A boat called "Humanity 1" belonging to the "SOS Humanity" rescue charity, pictured at sea from another vessel.
The sea rescue charity 'SOS Humanity' is one of those Berlin had approved modest funding forImage: Anupam Deb Kanunjna/DW

Germany's Foreign Ministry on Saturday said that media reports about Berlin planning to halt donations to NGOs operating migrant rescue boats in the Mediterranean Sea were mistaken. 

"The Foreign Ministry is following through on the Bundestag [parliament] assignment to promote civilian sea rescue with projects on land and sea," a spokesperson told the dpa news agency on Saturday, issuing similar comments to Reuters as well. 

Speculation that the scheme might be pulled — following criticism from Italy and other EU countries, and Chancellor Olaf Scholz appearing to distance himself from the scheme — had intensified when no mention of it could be found in a 2024 draft budget. But the Foreign Ministry described this omission as a "technical oversight." 

"Because of a technical oversight an explicit appraisal of the relevant budget funds was not included in the current draft of the 2024 budget plans," the spokesperson said. 

Plans were already in place to remedy this, they said, adding "promotion of sea rescues with the authority of the Bundestag is anticipated for the years from 2024 to 2026." 

Why was the funding in doubt? 

German mass-circulation daily Bild had reported on Friday, citing the omission from the draft budget, that both Chancellor Scholz and the Foreign Ministry were now opposed to continuing the plan, following criticism from Italy and other EU members. 

Donating funds to the migrant rescue charities is contentious in some front-line EU member states, which argue that the boats' presence encourages people smugglers to embark on the dangerous journey. 

Italy's right-wing government led by Giorgia Meloni had in the past tried to stop several such boats from docking with rescued irregular migrants on board. 

Meloni had also complained to Scholz about the German government's plans on learning about them, inviting him to discuss the issue with her at his "earliest convenience." The contents of her letter to Scholz also soon landed in Italian media.

German Chancellor Olaf Scholz and Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni in a discussion as they move through a room at an informal EU summit on migration in Spain. October 6, 2023.
Olaf Scholz told reporters in Spain on Friday, where he also spoke with Meloni, that the spending had not been authorized or recommended by him, but rather by Germany's parliamentImage: Kay Nietfeld/dpa/picture alliance

On Friday, after meeting with Meloni on the sidelines of an informal EU migration summit in Spain, Scholz had distanced himself from the scheme somewhat, seeking to emphasize that it was the German parliament that had recommended the policy, not his office. 

"I did not submit the recommendation," Scholz said. Asked about his personal opinion on the policy, Scholz declined to offer one and instead repeated that he had not called for it.

The funds in question are comparatively modest at present by the standards of major government spending — between €400,000 and €800,000 for two charities, one of which operates on land and the other at sea. It's conceivable that more organizations might be approved for funding though. 

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Italy is the most common landing point for people trying to cross the Mediterranean and reach Europe's shores, with Greece, Spain and Cyprus also frequent points of arrival. 

The policy had also been questioned, somewhat unusually, by entrepreneuer Elon Musk — with his questioning reference to it meeting a fairly terse response from the Foreign Ministry in Berlin. 

"Is the German public aware of this?" Musk had asked, during a day where much of his focus online was migration in the US. "Yes. And it's called saving lives," came the Foreign Ministry's response.

Italy and other southern European countries are struggling with rising numbers of new arrivals, seemingly prompted by an array of factors including comparatively calm seas late in the year and unrest in much of Africa but particularly Tunisia and Libya. 

From January to October, some 194,000 migrants and refugees reached Spain, Italy, Malta, Greece and Cyprus by boat, compared to 112,000 in the same period last year, according to the International Organization for Migration.

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msh/lo (dpa, Reuters)

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