• Le dessous des images. Derniers instants avant le naufrage

    Au large de la Grèce, une équipe de garde-côtes survole et capture cette scène depuis un hélicoptère. Des centaines de migrants appellent au secours depuis un chalutier. La plupart ne survivront pas au naufrage. Mais à quoi a servi cette image ? Présenté par Sonia Devillers, le magazine qui analyse les images de notre époque.

    Ce cliché du 13 juin 2023 est repris dans toute la presse internationale. Les autorités grecques ont photographié ce bateau de pêche qu’ils savent bondé et fragile, et dont les passagers sont affamés et déshydratés. Pourtant, ils ne seront pas capables de les secourir. La responsabilité des garde-côtes sera mise en cause par médias et ONG. Arthur Carpentier, journaliste au Monde et coauteur d’une enquête sur ce naufrage, nous explique en quoi les images ont permis de reconstituer le drame. Le chercheur suisse Charles Heller nous aide à comprendre l’impact médiatique, politique et symbolique des images de migrants et de naufrages en Méditerranée.

    https://www.arte.tv/fr/videos/110342-133-A/le-dessous-des-images

    Citation de #Charles_Heller :

    « Ces #images cristallisent toutes les #inégalités et les #conflits du monde dans lequel on vit. Elles nous disent aussi la #normalisation de la #violence des #frontières, sur la large acceptation de dizaines de milliers de #morts aux frontières européennes, et en #Méditerranée en particulier »

    #naufrage #migrations #réfugiés #mer #Méditerranée #mer_Méditerranée #Grèce #reconstruction #Pylos #géolocalisation #architecture_forensique #images #mourir_en_mer #morts_en_mer #garde-côtes #Frontex #reconstitution #SAR #mer_Egée #border_forensics #domination #imaginaire #invasion #3_octobre_2013 #émoi #émotions #normalisation_de_la_violence

    ping @reka

    • Frontex report into Greek shipwreck suggests more deaths could have been prevented

      A Frontex report suggesting that many of the deaths caused by the shipwreck off the Greek coast near Pylos last June could have been prevented was released by the Aegean Boat Report NGO on their X feed yesterday evening (January 31).

      Investigations into what happened to the Adriana, an overcrowded fishing vessel carrying some 750 people from Libya to Italy that sank off the coast of Greece on June 13, are ongoing.

      However, a report produced by the European Border Agency Frontex — marked “sensitive” and dated December 1, 2023 — was posted to X (formerly known as Twitter) late on January 31.

      The report was posted by Aegean Boat Report, an organization working with migrants in the eastern Mediterranean.

      In their post on X, they thank freelance Brussels-based journalist Eleonora Vasques for “making it available to the public.” Frontex told InfoMigrants in an email that they had released the report via their “Transparency Office.” They added that the “release wass part of a Public Access to Documents request, an important process that allows us to share information with the public.”

      Vasques writes regularly for the European news portal Euractiv. One of her latest reports looks into what happened in the Cutro shipwreck off Italy almost a year ago. The story was also sourced back to an internal Frontex report, which concluded that more lives could have potentially been saved if the response from Frontex and the Italian coast guard had been different.

      https://twitter.com/ABoatReport/status/1752800986664448090

      Long and detailed report

      The 17-page Pylos report from Frontex is redacted in parts and goes into great detail about what happened and which authorities and merchant ships were involved. It also compares timelines from various authorities, NGOs and media organizations.

      In the email to InfoMigrants, Frontex continued that they “strive to make such documents available in our Public Register of Documents as promptly as possible.” The Press Spokesperson Krzysztof Borowski wrote that the “Pylos tragedy is a stark reminder of the challenges and dangers faced at sea. We at Frontex share the profound concern and sadness of the public regarding this heartbreaking event.” He finished by saying: “Our thoughts are with all those affected by this tragedy, and we remain dedicated to our mission of safeguarding lives while ensuring border security.”
      Committment to ’assess cases more thoroughly

      Although the report finds that Frontex “followed applicable procedures”, it admitted that “going forward and based on a reviewed assessment methodology ... the team … should assess similar cases more thoroughly against the need to issue a Mayday alert.”

      A Mayday alert is a radio distress signal used at sea.

      The report appears to suggest that more could have been done on the day to prevent such a huge loss of life.

      According to the Frontex report posted on X, “in the hours following the sighting of Adriana, Frontex made three attempts to follow up on the case, by suggesting additional Frontex Surveillance Aircraft (FSA) sorties.”

      Frontex writes that “no reply was received by the Greek authorities to Frontex’ repeated offers until Adriana’s shipwreck.”

      Frontex made an initial statement on June 16 expressing “shock and sadness” at the events off Pylos.
      ’Greek authorities failed to timely declare a search and rescue situation’

      Although the investigating office at Frontex underlines that it is “not in a position to conclude what caused Adriana’s capsizing and shipwreck … it appears that the Greek authorities failed to timely declare a search and rescue and to deploy a sufficient number of appropriate assets in time to rescue the migrants.”

      The report stated that Frontex “regrets the lack of information provided by the Greek authorities to its enquiry but still expects to receive updates from the national investigations in progress.”

      According to Frontex’ timeline of the incident, the agency first learned about the existence of the fishing vessel carrying migrants on June 13 at around 10:12 UTC, or around 13:12 in Greek summer time. They spotted the vessel from their aerial surveillance plane Eagle 1. About four hours later, another update was sent to the fundamental rights monitor, but according to the report, nothing “out of the ordinary” was flagged regarding the vessel at this point.

      The next paragraph jumped to June 14 at 06.19 UTC, when the fundamental rights monitor received “another update … notifying that Adriana sank overnight and a SAR [Search and Rescue] was in progress.”
      ’Serious Incident Report’ launched by Frontex on June 26

      In the following days, the Office for Fundamental Rights at Frontex monitored the aftermath of the incident, states the report.

      They studied “Frontex’ own sightings of Adriana” along with “statements by Greek officials, and initial information reported in the media.”

      Frontex launched a “Serious Incident Report (SIR) on June 26, “to clarify the role of Frontex in the incident as well as the legality and fundamental rights compliance of the assistance to the boat in distress, and the coordination and conduct of rescue operation by national authorities.”

      According to a summary of that work, the first mention of the Adriana came from the Italian control authorities in Rome at 08:01 UTC on June 13.

      At that point, Rome’s search and rescue authorities contacted Greece’s authorities and Frontex about “a fishing vessel with approximately 750 migrants on board, known to be sailing within the Greek Search and Rescue Region at 06:51 UTC.” At that point, Rome had already alerted the authorities to “reports of two dead children on board.”

      After receiving this report, Frontex wrote that it directed its plane Eagle 1, which was already in the air, to fly over the fishing vessel “even though the vessel lay outside the normal patrolling route.”

      The report said the Eagle 1 spotted the “heavily overcrowded” vessel at 09:47 UTC and informed the Greek authorities. Ten minutes later, the plane left the area due to low fuel and returned to base.
      Italian authorities report Adriana ’adrift’ long before Greek authorities do

      By 13:18, Rome’s search and rescue authorities provided an update of the situation to Greek authorities and Frontex. At that point, they said the boat was “reported adrift” and had “seven people dead on board.”

      At 14:54, Frontex reportedly received an email from the NGO Watch The Med – Alarm Phone alerting Frontex, JRCC Piraeus, the Greek Ombudsman’s Office, UNHCR and others to the new location of the fishing boat. In that email, Alarm Phone stated there were “several very sick individuals, including babies” among the approximately 750 people on board and that the boat was “not able to sail.”

      About 30 minutes later, this email was forwarded by Frontex to the Greek National Coordination Center and JRCC Piraeus, and it was sent on to the Fundamental Rights Office.

      About an hour later, Frontex contacted the Greek authorities to request an update on the situation. Frontex also offered to deploy a surveillance aircraft to check on the ship’s current position, but reports it received no reply.

      Just under two and a half hours later, the Greek authorities did request that Frontex support them “in the detection of a migrant boat within the maritime area south of Crete, as part of another SAR operation.” This turned out to be a sailing boat with about 50 people on board.
      ’No reply was received’

      Later that evening, Frontex contacted the Greek authorities twice more and said no reply was received.

      At 23:20 UTC, Frontex redirected the plane that had been helping with the fishing boat off Crete to the last known position of the fishing vessel.

      The timeline moves to June 14. At 02:46 UTC, Frontex informs the Greek authorities that its plane was headed towards the last position of the fishing vessel. It says it received no reply from the Hellenic authorities.

      Over an hour passed before the plane, this time the Heron 2, reached the “operational area” where it spotted “nine maritime assets (eight merchant vessels and one Hellenic Coast Guard patrol vessel) and two helicopters involved in a large-scale SAR operation.” At that point, states Frontex in the report “no signs of the fishing vessel were spotted.”

      At 05:31, Frontex told the Greek authorities that its plane Heron 1 was about to leave the operation, but offered Eagle 1, which was already airborne, to help with the SAR operation. The Greek authorities replied over two hours later that “no further aerial surveillance support was needed for the time being.”
      No mention of dead bodies on board in Greek timeline

      The Frontex report then includes a similar timeline from the Greek authorities. In the Greek version, there is no initial mention of dead bodies on board. They say they established contact with those on board and “no request for assistance was addressed to the Greek authorities.”

      Although the Italians reported that the vessel was already adrift around 13:18 UTC, according to the Frontex report, in the Greek version, the vessel is “still sailing with a steady course and speed” at 15:00 UTC.

      Around that same time, a Maltese flagged commercial vessel approaches the fishing boat to supply them with food and water, as requested by the Greek authorities. According to the Greek report, the people on board were repeatedly asked if they were facing “any kind of danger” or were “in need of additional support.” Their answer, according to Greece, was “they just wanted to continue sailing towards Italy.”

      30 minutes later, again according to JRCC Piraeus, via satellite phone contact, those on board said they wanted to keep sailing.

      At 18:00, the boat was approached again. According to the report, the migrants “accepted water” from the Greek-flagged commercial vessel that approached them, but “threw the rest of the supplies into the sea.” This approach and refusal of assistance carried on into the evening.
      Adriana ’still holding a steady course and speed’

      At 19:40 UTC, according to the Greek report, a Greek coast guard vessel approached the fishing vessel and “remained at a close distance in order to observe it.” It was still holding a “steady course and speed, without any indications of sailing problems.”

      It was only at 22:40 UTC, according to the Greek report, that the fishing vessel “stopped moving and informed the Greek authorities that they had an engine failure.”

      A Greek coast guard vessel then immediately approached the vessel to assess the situation. Less than an hour later — at 23:04 UTC, but 02:04 local time on June 14 — the Greek report notes that the fishing vessel “took an inclination to the right side, then a sudden inclination to the left side and again a great inclination to the right side, and eventually capsized.”

      They said "people on the external deck fell in the sea and the vessel sunk within 10-15 minutes.” At that point, the Hellenic coast guard “initiated a SAR operation.”

      The Frontex report then notes “alleged discrepancies” between the various timelines and survivor statements given to the media.

      They say that many of the survivors reported that the Greek coast guard “tied ropes onto the fishing vessel in an effort to tow it,” which allegedly caused it to destabilize and capsize.

      In the past, the Greek coast guard have tied and towed vessels successfully towards safety.

      However, while the Greek coast guard acknowledged that one rope was attached around three hours before the boat sank to ascertain passengers’ conditions, there was “no attempt to tow it.”

      The rope, say the Greeks, was removed by the migrants on board just a few minutes later and the coast guard vessel moved a distance away to continue observation.
      Was Adriana stationary prior to capsizing or not?

      The BBC and several other media outlets also reported at the time that prior to capsizing and sinking, the fishing vessel had not moved for several hours.

      This is consistent with the Frontex timeline, which mentions the Italian authorities’ warnings that the boat was adrift the day before it eventually capsized.

      Later in the report, Frontex notes that many of the “alternative and complementary timelines” put together by international NGOs and journalists are “credible” as they quote “more than one source for each statement.”

      The Frontex report looks into the question of whether or not the Adriana was drifting for several hours before sinking.

      It concludes that the Faithful Warrior, one of the merchant tankers sent to assist, was tracked between 17:00 and 20:00 and was “likely stationary or moving at extremely slow speed (less than 1 knot),” indicating that the Adriana was probably not sailing normally until shortly before it capsized as the Greek report claimed.

      The report also consulted “maritime experts to gain insight into issues pertaining to stability when a trawler of Adriana’s type is overloaded with human cargo.” Although their consultations were not precise due to a lack technical data, the experts indicated that the amount of people on board could have destabilized the boat or affected its stability.
      Testimony from survivors

      A Frontex team took testimonies from survivors after the shipwreck. They said they were told there were between 125 and 150 Syrians on board, including five women and six children.

      Around 400-425 Pakistanis were on board, the report said, most of whom were placed on the lower decks. The access ladders had been removed, making it impossible for them to exit.

      There were also between 150 and 170 Egyptians and about 10 Palestinians on board. The alleged smugglers were all said to be Egyptians and enforced discipline with pocket knives.

      Numerous fights broke out on board, particularly after food ran out a few days into sailing. At some point, the captain allegedly suffered a heart attack and the boat was “drifting without engine for extended periods of time.” On day four, June 12, six people were reported to have died, and others had resorted to drinking urine or sea water.

      On day five, June 13, some migrants said they received supplies from two vessels and “at night … were approached by a small boat that they were asked to follow.”

      They said they could not do this because of their engine malfunction. Several of the migrants also allege that attempts were made to tow the vessel — presumably by the Hellenic coast guard, they said.

      Survivors also said that at one point, a boat tied a rope to the front of the Adriana and started “making turns”. This, they said, “caused the migrants to run to one side, their vessel started rocking, and eventually capsized within 15 minutes.”

      Only people on the upper decks were able to jump into the water.
      Greek authorities leave ’detailed questions answered’

      In July, Frontex said it approached the Greek authorities with a “detailed set of questions” but most of its questions were left unanswered.

      In conclusion, the Frontex Fundamental Rights Office concluded that although Frontex “upheld” all its “applicable procedures,” in the light of the information that had already been transmitted and similar situations in which Mayday alerts had been issued, the assessment could have been different and the process for issuing Mayday alerts in the future “needs to be reviewed.”

      The report admits that “at the time of the initial sighting [of the Adriana] by Eagle 1, there was reasonable certainty that persons aboard … were threatened by grave and imminent danger and required immediate assistance.”

      They also say the “resources mobilized by the [Greek] authorities during the day … were not sufficient for the objective of rescuing the migrants.”

      Frontex adds that the Greek authorities appear to have “delayed the declaration of SAR operation until the moment of the shipwreck when it was no longer possible to rescue all the people on board.”

      https://www.infomigrants.net/en/post/54928/frontex-report-into-greek-shipwreck-suggests-more-deaths-could-have-be

  • « L’#indifférence face aux morts en #Méditerranée est le signe d’un effondrement en #humanité »

    L’écart entre l’#émotion provoquée par la disparition des cinq occupants du submersible « Titan » et l’indifférence à l’égard des centaines de migrants ayant subi le même sort, huit jours plus tôt, en Méditerranée doit nous interpeller, soulignent les anthropologues Michel Agier, Filippo Furri et Carolina Kobelinsky.

    Jusqu’à la difficile acceptation, le 22 juin, de la mort des cinq touristes embarqués dans le submersible #Titan pour voir de près l’épave du #Titanic, les médias du monde entier ont suivi heure par heure les rebondissements de cette tentative de #sauvetage, dans laquelle plusieurs Etats s’étaient impliqués. L’émotion suscitée par cet accident a mis crûment en évidence, par contraste, le calme plat des Etats et de la plupart des médias européens face à un autre drame maritime, le #naufrage, une semaine plus tôt, le 14 juin, d’un chalutier parti de Libye avec environ 750 passagers originaires pour la plupart du Pakistan, de Syrie et d’Egypte, dont seulement 104 personnes sont rescapées. A ce jour, seuls 84 corps ont été retrouvés.

    Reste un calcul que presque personne ne semble vouloir faire, portant à plus de 600 le nombre de victimes fatales. Ce naufrage n’est tristement pas le premier, mais il est l’un des plus meurtriers de ces dernières années. Pourtant, si le naufrage, déjà en Méditerranée, du 3 octobre 2013 et celui survenu dans la nuit du 18 au 19 avril 2015 ont provoqué un grand retentissement médiatique ainsi que des réponses des autorités italiennes, cette énième tragédie, elle, n’a pas eu d’effet.

    La tragédie n’a pas donné lieu à la sidération collective, elle n’a pas provoqué de polémique publique sur les politiques sécuritaires qui sont aujourd’hui la norme de presque tous les Etats européens. Elle n’a pas fait changer d’un pouce les discours xénophobes et sécuritaires des dirigeants européens. En France, les tractations continuent autour de la nouvelle loi sur l’immigration, sans cesse repoussée faute d’accord entre la droite et le centre droit, avec en perspective la remise en cause des conventions internationales de droits humains, et le durcissement des mesures sécuritaires antimigrants.

    Le rejet des responsabilités

    En Europe, le nouveau pacte sur l’asile et la migration porte moins sur la capacité des pays membres à organiser un dispositif d’asile européen que sur le renforcement, une fois de plus, de la fermeture des frontières et de la logique d’externalisation [consistant à délocaliser la gestion administrative et policière des migrants dans les pays de départ ou de transit].

    Comme cela s’est passé après le naufrage dans la Manche du 21 novembre 2021, lorsque les gardes-côtes et sauveteurs français et britanniques se rejetèrent la #responsabilité du drame, ou après celui de Cutro, en Calabre, le 26 février 2023, où la police, les douanes et les gardes-côtes italiens sont mis en cause, l’Agence européenne des frontières externes (Frontex) et les gardes-côtes grecs se renvoient la responsabilité de cet abandon en mer pour le drame du 14 juin.

    Plusieurs témoignages de rescapés accusent directement les gardes-côtes grecs d’avoir provoqué l’accident après avoir attaché un câble au chalutier afin de l’éloigner des eaux territoriales grecques pour ne pas avoir à prendre en charge ses occupants une fois à terre. Une telle pratique pour remorquer le bateau n’est pourtant pas recommandée, puisqu’elle comporte le risque de déstabiliser l’embarcation, voire de la faire chavirer.

    Une gestion migratoire au mépris du droit

    Détournant les regards ailleurs que sur les administrations grecques et européennes, la mise en cause rapide de neuf supposés « passeurs » parmi les rescapés n’est autre que l’invention cynique d’un bouc émissaire. Le renvoi (« push back »), l’abandon ou le harcèlement aux frontières sont devenus la règle implicite de la gestion migratoire contemporaine, au mépris du droit.

    Depuis que l’Europe de Schengen existe, elle a tué ou au moins « laissé mourir » plus de 55 000 exilés, hommes et femmes, à ses frontières. L’Organisation internationale pour les migrations, liée aux Nations unies, évoque quant à elle, selon ses données actualisées en juillet, le total de 27 675 morts et disparus dans la seule Méditerranée depuis 2014. Mais la publication de ces nombres, aussi édifiants soient-ils, semble sans effet.

    C’est surtout l’#indifférence apparente des sociétés qui interpelle. Pour les uns, le sentiment d’impuissance et l’accablement laissent sans voix, pour les autres une acceptation ou une accoutumance coupables à une hécatombe interminable. Huit jours après le naufrage du 14 juin, un autre a déjà eu lieu près de Lampedusa, faisant 46 morts, passés cette fois totalement inaperçus.

    Le refus de faire face collectivement à la réalité

    Des hommes et des femmes originaires d’Afrique subsaharienne avaient embarqué à Sfax pour échapper aux persécutions en Tunisie, alors que, dans le même temps, à l’instar de l’Italie, les pays européens marchandaient avec le président de ce pays, dont les propos racistes contre les Africains ont pourtant été largement rapportés, pour faire de la Tunisie un pays de rétention, comme l’est déjà la Libye.

    Ces politiques d’externalisation sont des manières de mettre en œuvre le rejet des indésirables, leur disparition des radars de l’attention publique, et elles ont besoin de l’indifférence des sociétés. A la peur des étrangers venus des pays du Sud, régulièrement entretenue ou suscitée par des dirigeants bornés, aveugles aux réalités du monde, succèdent des politiques de repli et de fermeture, puis, logiquement, des dizaines de milliers de « vies perdues », selon les mots du sociologue Zygmunt Bauman (1925-2017) dans son livre qui porte ce titre (Payot, 2006), consacré à « la modernité et ses exclus ».

    On évoque souvent, à propos de ce naufrage du 14 juin, « au moins 80 morts » et « des centaines de disparus ». Certes, parler de « #disparus » peut être une forme minimale de respect à l’égard des familles et des proches qui attendent encore de voir les corps de leur frère, cousin ou enfant. Mais c’est aussi une façon de ne pas faire face collectivement à la réalité. Attend-on que les corps noyés se volatilisent ?

    Une urgence absolue

    Plus probablement, l’absence de reconnaissance et de deuil pour ces plus de 600 personnes qui avaient un nom, une vie et des proches contribuera à en faire des fantômes pour l’Europe. En 2015, après le naufrage du 18 au 19 avril, l’opération de récupération de l’épave organisée par le gouvernement italien de l’époque, coûteuse et complexe, avait interpellé la conscience collective, avec l’ambition de récupérer les corps des victimes et de mettre en place un dispositif médico-légal pour les identifier et leur donner un nom. Cette fois, ces corps semblent destinés à rester emprisonnés à jamais au fond de la mer.

    L’écart entre l’#émoi suscité par la disparition des cinq occupants du Titan et l’indifférence à l’égard des centaines de personnes migrantes subissant le même sort huit jours plus tôt ne tient-il qu’à l’#anonymat de ces dernières, au fait qu’il n’y aurait pas d’histoires à raconter, pas de suspense à susciter, tant leur sort s’est banalisé ? S’émouvoir, comprendre, agir sont trois moments indispensables pour faire face.

    L’indifférence face aux morts en Méditerranée est le signe d’un effondrement en humanité dont il nous faut prendre la mesure pour sortir du cercle infernal qui l’a provoqué. Il nous faut, collectivement, raconter toutes ces vies perdues, retracer ces destins individuels, comprendre ce qui est en train de se passer, et agir dans le respect de toutes les vies humaines. La tâche est « titanesque » et demande du temps et du courage, mais elle est absolument urgente. Paradoxalement, l’#accoutumance, l’#accablement ou l’indifférence apparente sont les signes les plus éclatants de cette urgence.

    https://www.lemonde.fr/idees/article/2023/07/25/l-indifference-face-aux-morts-en-mediterranee-est-le-signe-d-un-effondrement
    #morts_aux_frontières #décès #migrations #réfugiés #frontières #Filippo_Furri #Carolina_Kobelinsky #mourir_aux_frontières #morts #14_juin_2023 #terminologie #mots #mourir_en_mer

  • Elle est belle votre ville la #nuit: partagez vos photos!

    Jusqu’à début janvier, « Le Temps » consacre une série d’articles aux nouveaux défis de l’#éclairage_urbain. Il appelle ses lecteurs et internautes à partager leurs #émois_lumineux : captez la beauté, ou la crudité, d’une ville de nuit, et partagez cet instant. Envoyez vos images jusqu’au 8 janvier à photo@letemps.ch


    http://www.letemps.ch/Page/Uuid/0283305a-8921-11e4-9cd5-59e213f8caa2/Elle_est_belle_votre_ville_la_nuit_partagez_vos_photos
    #urban_matters #paysage_nocturne