Dear friends,
Johanna just wanted her tiny baby to have a life worth living.
So
fleeing violence, poverty, and hunger, she gambled on a flimsy, inflatable dinghy -- hoping it would take them to the safety of Europe. It ended in tragedy.
The boat deflated, and 7-month-old baby Joseph died.
Over 900 people have drowned in the Mediterranean this year -- it could be THOUSANDS if it wasn't for humanitarian rescue boats. And that's the problem: Europe is now shamefully blocking those civilian rescue missions from leaving port.
All but one.
In the entire Mediterranean,
there's now just one civilian rescue boat still operating: the Open Arms. Their commitment is incredible, facing violent coast guards, stormy seas, and daily heartbreak. They've rescued over 60,000 people from the sea --
and they're desperate for funding. We can help.
This is our chance to be a lifeline for some of the world's most vulnerable people. People who may otherwise be left to drown, miles out at sea. But if enough of us chip in, we could help fund this rescue ship through the icy winter weeks and help other missions fight through administrative red tape.
Donate what you can now: These aren't migrants, or immigrants, or refugees. They are humans: ordinary people in the most terrifying circumstances, just trying to live their lives and keep their families safe. We can't look away.
And yet that's exactly what the EU is doing: paying for detention centres, drone surveillance, and violent patrols to keep people trapped in countries like Libya, away from its shores.
Civilians shouldn't have to run rescue missions -- but the Open Arms crew is being forced to step in because if it didn't, there'd be thousands and thousands left to drown.
But it's incredibly expensive work -- and as the only rescue boat still able to operate, the area they cover is beyond massive, and this is the most freezing, deadly time of the year.
They need urgent funding, and if we all chip in, we could:
- Help fund Open Arms rescue missions through this critical winter period;
- Provide emergency food, life vests, and hygiene kits to people they rescue;
- Pay for medical doctors and trauma specialists on board;
- Fund legal battles to cut through red tape stopping other rescue missions;
- Power our human rights campaigning to protect vulnerable people around the world.
Our donations will save lives, it's that simple. And in another world, it could be us on those tiny boats, holding our youngest, desperately hoping that help will come. We can be that help --
chip in what you can now:
For years our movement has stood by the world's most vulnerable -- whether it's refugees fleeing war-torn Syria, the Rohingya running from genocide, or Yemen's starving children. We do it because every single life is precious -- no matter where you're from. This is a moment to stand by that belief again, reaching out, with open arms.
With fierce hope and determination -- always,
Mike, Camille, Patricia, Mohammad, Marigona, Aloys, Bert and the whole team at Avaaz
More information.
Baby, six months, dies hours after being saved from Mediterranean (Al Jazeera)
https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2020/11/12/baby-six-months-dies-hours-after-being-saved-from-mediterraneanRevealed: the great European refugee scandal (The Guardian)
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2020/mar/12/revealed-the-great-european-refugee-scandalMigrants' wedding rings lost at sea found by rescue boat weeks later (Independent)
https://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/europe/migrants-wedding-rings-found-mediterranean-sea-b1761549.html
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