Italy detains rescue ship for 60 days and proposes ‘sea blockade’ bill as hundreds are missing in Mediterranean
Berlin, 14 February 2026. While hundreds of people are still reported missing in the Central Mediterranean, Italian authorities on 13 February detained the rescue vessel Humanity 1 for 60 days in Trapani, Sicily, and imposed a fine of 10,000 euros on the German search and rescue organisation SOS Humanity. Authorities accuse the crew of failing to communicate with the Libyan Rescue Coordination Centre during their rescues of 33 people in distress. The detention order came shortly after the Italian government presented a bill enabling a ‘sea blockade’, a new measure against NGO rescue ships.
“Our crew informed all competent rescue coordination centres in accordance with international maritime law,” emphasised Humanity 1 Search and Rescue Coordinator Viviana di Bartolo. “We deliberately did not communicate with Libyan actors, as they cannot be considered legitimate search and rescue authorities – they are responsible for serious human rights violations against people seeking protection.”
According to SOS Humanity, this is the third detention of a rescue vessel from the “Justice Fleet” alliance within three months. The NGO-alliance criticises European support for Libyan actors at sea, whom it accuses of violence against people seeking protection and against rescue crews. In August 2025, the so-called Libyan Coast Guard fired at a non-governmental rescue ship.
“This dangerously turns reality on its head. While we save lives and are punished for it, the so-called Libyan Coast Guard is supported — the same forces that abuse and kill people fleeing,” said Marie Michel, policy expert at SOS Humanity. “We demand the immediate release of our rescue ship Humanity 1.”
According to SOS Humanity, this is the second detention of its vessel within three months. Earlier, the rescue ship Sea-Watch 5 had also been detained. Two of the largest NGO rescue ships in the Mediterranean are therefore being prevented from carrying out further rescues, the organisation added.
Meanwhile, the Italian government is further escalating the obstruction of humanitarian search and rescue in the Mediterranean. By introducing a new bill, Meloni’s government is planning a sea blockade for NGO ships: They may be prevented from entering Italian territorial waters for up to six months, if the authorities identify certain “security risks”.
“The renewed detention of our rescue ship Humanity 1 takes place in the context of another escalation of obstructing urgently needed search and rescue in the Mediterranean,” says Marie Michel. “With this draft law, which foresees a ‘naval blockade’, the Italian government is taking a dramatic step in its policy against civilian search and rescue operations. It further increases the humanitarian catastrophe at sea and blatantly undermines international law.”
Data from the International Organisation for Migration shows that in 2026, already 484 migrants were reported dead or missing following multiple shipwrecks in the Central Mediterranean amid extreme weather, with hundreds more deaths believed to be unrecorded.
please contact:
Press Officer Petra Krischok
press@sos-humanity.org
+49 (0) 176 55250654
of the Humanity 1 search and rescue operations can be found under this link.