• Source: Ocean Viking
    • The Ocean Viking is a former Platform supply vessel used as a humanitarian ship chartered from July 2019 by the SOS Méditerranée association.


      The vessel


      The Ocean Viking was built as a Platform supply vessel and put into service in 1986 in Norway.
      On 21 July 2019 SOS Méditerranée announced a new rescue campaign off the Libyan coast, using the supply vessel Ocean Viking. The approach is supported by the Norwegian authorities, who have given the vessel a flag. The operation costs € 14,000 per day. The vessel, which is 69 m long by 15 m beam, was built in 1986 to serve as a support vessel for oil rigs in the North Sea. It is operated by around thirty people (nine crew members, a search and rescue team and medical personnel) and can carry up to 200 passengers. It is faster and better equipped than the Aquarius. Onboard microphones and cameras will make it possible to record everything that happens on board and around the boat, in order to possibly prove that the work was carried out within a legal framework The ship, which will respect the ban on disembarking migrants in Italian ports is even banned from refueling in Malta.
      In 2024 french SOS Méditerranée president François Thomas estimated the cost for a day at sea for the Ocean Viking to be around € 24,000.


      Selected list of interventions


      During its first outing, four rescue missions on 9, 10 and 11 August 2019, brought the number of refugees on board to 356, to which were added a further 160 from on board the ship Open Arms.
      By 29 January 2020, when 407 migrants (recovered after five night rescue operations in less than 72 hours off Libya) disembarked in Taranto, the number of people saved thanks to the operations of this ship had mounted to more than 1,600.
      The ship was impounded for five months from July 2020, during which time additional equipment had been added, and released on 21 December 2020. Ocean Viking resumed operations in January 2021, embarking journalists from Mediapart. The crew rescued 119 migrants off the Libyan coast on 21 January 2021; two more rescues the next day brought the number of migrants on board to 374. They disembarked on 25 January at Augusta in Sicily.
      At the end of March 2021, the Ocean Viking was stranded to the south of Malta, pending permission to disembark 116 migrants rescued the previous week. The crew of the ship then tried to rescue further migrants during the sinking of 22 April 2021 in the Mediterranean, but without success.
      On 28 March 2022, SOS Méditerranée announced via Twitter that it had received permission to bring almost 160 migrants rescued in the Mediterranean to Italy. The Ocean Viking headed to the port of Augusta in Sicily. On 11 November 2022, the Ocean Viking arrived in the southern French port of Toulon with 234 people.
      On 25 March 2023, Ocean Viking was notified by Alarm Phone of a distress call in international waters. On the way to the emergency situation, the Libyan Coast Guard harassed the Ocean Viking and warning shots were fired in the air. The Ocean Viking had to turn away to protect itself while people fell into the water from the boat in distress. Video footage from a Sea Watch aircraft that observed and documented the maritime emergency was posted on Twitter.
      On 2 May 2023, the Ocean Viking docked in Civitavecchia near Rome with 168 migrants.
      On 7 July 2023, the Ocean Viking and its fast support vehicles initially picked up 40 people from a GRP boat off the Libyan coast. After a Libyan Coast Guard speedboat showed up, the only Arabic-speaking activist negotiated the rescue of people from another boat, which had since been spotted by an NGO plane a few nautical miles away. Apparently the Libyans also agreed to the rescue of these migrants - but then began to hinder the activists a little later with disruptive maneuvers and warning shots. Two days later, 57 migrants were landed in Civitavecchia and the Italian authorities initially detained the ship. Just a few days after landing, 10 Sudanese, Eritreans and Ethiopians, said to be between 14 and 17 years old, fled the accommodation assigned to them by the Italian authorities and went into hiding.
      On 13 March 2024, the vessel rescued 25 survivors from an inflatable dinghy, from which some 60 others had died.


      See also


      List of migrant vessel incidents on the Mediterranean Sea
      List of ships for the rescue of refugees in the Mediterranean Sea
      Timeline of the European migrant crisis
      Mediterranean Sea refugee smuggling
      Proactiva Open Arms
      Salvamento Marítimo Humanitario


      References




      External links


      Media related to IMO 8506854 at Wikimedia Commons

      SOS MEDITERRANEE ITALIA
      Data sheet as provided by former operator Hoyland Offshore in 2011

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