By Agence France-PresseÂ
For three young Libyans plucked from a deflating dingy in the Mediterranean, the perils of trying to cross the sea were still preferable to what they had left behind in their war-torn home.
(From L) Salah, 19, Ibrahim, 22 and Khalil, 20, three migrants from Libya sit on deck of the 'Ocean Viking' rescue ship, jointly operated by French NGOs SOS Mediterranee and Medecins sans Frontieres (MSF) on August 18, 2019, during a search-and-rescue operation in the Mediterranean Sea, as the vessel is in international waters between Malta and the island of Linosa. - For the three Libyan rescued from a dinghy sinking, taking the sea was better than their war-torn country. The Ocean Viking rescue ship, operated by SOS Mediterranee and Doctors without Borders (MSF), with 356 migrants on board is looking since August 14, 2019, for a port to dock. (Photo by Anne CHAON / AFP / MANILA BULLETIN)
Salah, Khalil and Ibrahim, aged between 19 and 22, sat in a corner of the Ocean Viking vessel operated by SOS Mediterranee and Doctors without Borders as it waited for permission to dock at a port.
They sat apart from other migrants from Sudan, Chad, Ethiopia, Senegal and the Ivory Coast who have fled torture and abuse in Libya where most of them had gone to seek work.
"I had no idea how dangerous the sea could be," says Khalil, 20.
"But Libya is collapsing -- you cannot live there," he adds, pulling an imaginary trigger.
(From L) Salah, 19, Ibrahim, 22 and Khalil, 20, three migrants from Libya sit on deck of the 'Ocean Viking' rescue ship, jointly operated by French NGOs SOS Mediterranee and Medecins sans Frontieres (MSF) on August 18, 2019, during a search-and-rescue operation in the Mediterranean Sea, as the vessel is in international waters between Malta and the island of Linosa. - For the three Libyan rescued from a dinghy sinking, taking the sea was better than their war-torn country. The Ocean Viking rescue ship, operated by SOS Mediterranee and Doctors without Borders (MSF), with 356 migrants on board is looking since August 14, 2019, for a port to dock. (Photo by Anne CHAON / AFP / MANILA BULLETIN)
Salah, Khalil and Ibrahim, aged between 19 and 22, sat in a corner of the Ocean Viking vessel operated by SOS Mediterranee and Doctors without Borders as it waited for permission to dock at a port.
They sat apart from other migrants from Sudan, Chad, Ethiopia, Senegal and the Ivory Coast who have fled torture and abuse in Libya where most of them had gone to seek work.
"I had no idea how dangerous the sea could be," says Khalil, 20.
"But Libya is collapsing -- you cannot live there," he adds, pulling an imaginary trigger.