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Global Day of CommemorAction for the Dead, Missing, Persecuted and Forcefully Disappeared at Sea and at the Borders.

1,971 people died or disappeared in the Mediterranean in 2021. The UNHCR says that over the past decade, the number of people who have died in transit over the Mediterranean exceeds 23,000. The Mediterranean remains one of the world’s deadliest migratory routes yet time and time again, we witness Maltese authorities looking away from their duties to protect the lives of people seeking asylum in our search and rescue zone.

Today, we join people across the world to strongly denounce the deadly violence of the world’s border regimes and call on responsible authorities to respect human rights, international law and the 1951 Geneva Refugee Convention, and to act humanely to prevent deaths and disappearance of lives. A number of organisations and individuals gathered by the harbour in Senglea to remember people who have died, gone missing or become victims of enforced disappearance on their journey across the world’s borders.

This event is one of many taking place to mark the Global Day of CommemorAction where people stand in solidarity with the relatives of those who died or disappeared along migratory routes and call for action to prevent this from happening again.

It is an established fact that Maltese authorities collaborate with the Libyan Coastguard in illegal pushbacks. We regularly read reports of Malta ignoring distress calls and refusing disembarkation to the rescued. We witness asylum seekers being subjected to degrading and humiliating treatment. The imprisonment of people on Captain Morgan boats in 2020 is a tragic case in point.

We remind authorities that these people are mothers, fathers, sisters, brothers and children with names.

We call on authorities to remember that saving lives at sea is a legal and moral obligation. Human rights law and international law bind states to safeguard the right to seek asylum and to treat asylum seekers with respect and dignity at every stage of the process.

We call on EU institutions to offer strong assistance measures to ensure Malta and other Member States can offer the safety and dignity migratory peoples are entitled to.

Why does CommemorAction Day happen on the 6th of February?

On the 6th of February 2014, Spanish border police killed at least 15 people attempting to cross into the Spanish enclave of Ceuta from Tarajal.

These migrants drowned as the Guardia Civil armed with aggressive riot gear fired rubber bullets into them.

This tragedy has become a shameful symbol of deadly migration policies across the world. Spanish courts have since then ruled that no crime was committed and acquitted the Guardia Civil officers.

The victims’ families still wait for justice.

The first CommemorationAction took place on the 6th of February 2019 in Oujda where families of deceased, missing or disappeared migrants called for an end to border violence.

The Tarajal massacre is but one example of 20 years of aggression where victims remain without justice, graves without names and borders without rights.

Read in Maltese here.

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