Marc Gasol part of Mediterranean rescue effort to save shipwrecked migrant woman fleeing Africa
Memphis Grizzlies center Marc Gasol was part of an Spanish activist rescue effort in the Mediterranean Sea that saved the life of a shipwrecked migrant woman fleeing Africa on Monday.
Libyan Coast guard acknowledged intercepting migrant ship
Libyan Coast Guard spokesman Ayoub Gassim
told reporters that the Coast Guard stopped a boat on Monday carrying 158 passengers, provided them humanitarian and medical aid and took them to a refugee camp in Khoms, a coastal city on the western side of Libya.
Ayoub Gassim rebuffed the criticism and blamed the tragedy on human traffickers and NGOs like POA.
“All disasters happening in the sea are caused by human traffickers who are only interested in profit and the presence of such irresponsible, non-governmental groups in the region,”
Ayoub Gassim said in a statement.
Marc Gasol directly involved in migrant rescue
Gasol, who is seen in photos helping the woman on a stretcher while riding in a raft wrote about “frustration, anger and helplessness” over “vulnerable people” who “are abandoned to their deaths at sea” in a Tuesday Twitter post about the rescue.
Marc Gasol
✔@MarcGasol
https://twitter.com/MarcGasol/status/1019319737308893184
Frustration, anger, and helplessness. It’s unbelievable how so many vulnerable people are abandoned to their deaths at sea.
Deep admiration for these I call my teammates at this time
@openarms_fund
The connection between Gasol — a Spanish-born basketball player who has played in the NBA since 2008 — and POA is unclear, but his belief in the POA cause appears evident.
Group Gasol worked with critical of Libya
Oscar Camps, a leader of POA who took part in the rescue effort, criticized the Libyan Coast Guard’s account of its interception of the migrant boat as omitting the details about leaving behind the two women and the toddler. " data-reactid="34" style="margin-bottom: 1em; color: rgb(38, 40, 42); font-family: "Helvetica Neue", Helvetica, Arial, sans-serif; font-size: 15px;">Oscar Camps, a leader of POA who took part in the rescue effort, criticized the Libyan Coast Guard’s account of its interception of the migrant boat as omitting the details about leaving behind the two women and the toddler.
“The Libyan Coast Guard announced that it had intercepted a boat with 158 people on board and provided medical and humanitarian assistance,” Camps said. “What they did not say was that they left two women and a child on board and sank the ship because they did not want to go on the Libyan patrol.”" data-reactid="35" style="margin-bottom: 1em; color: rgb(38, 40, 42); font-family: "Helvetica Neue", Helvetica, Arial, sans-serif; font-size: 15px;">“The Libyan Coast Guard announced that it had intercepted a boat with 158 people on board and provided medical and humanitarian assistance,” Camps said. “What they did not say was that they left two women and a child on board and sank the ship because they did not want to go on the Libyan patrol.”
Libya at center of migration crisis
“This is the direct consequence of contracting armed militias to make the rest of Europe believe that Libya is a state, a government and a safe country,”
Camps said on Twitter Tuesday.