Italy seizes German group’s rescue boat in immigration probe

Migrants on a wooden boat are "rescued" by German NGO Jugend Rettet ship "Juventa" crew in the Mediterranean sea off Libya coast, June 18, 2017. (REUTERS/Stefano Rellandini)
Updated 02 August 2017
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Italy seizes German group’s rescue boat in immigration probe

ROME: Italian authorities ordered a German group’s migrant rescue vessel seized Wednesday, alleging that its crew took on migrants directly from smugglers’ boats near Libya’s coast.
The Dutch-flagged Iuventa was ordered to remain in port in Lampedusa, a tiny fishing island off Sicily. It is operated by Jugend Rettet, a group based in Berlin mainly made up of young volunteers.
While investigators suspect “the crime of clandestine immigration” was committed by some of the Jugend Rettet boat’s crew, prosecutor Ambrogio Cartosio told reporters that “my personal conviction was that the motive is humanitarian, exclusively humanitarian.”
The preventive seizure of the boat was based on evidence that emerged from three episodes in which crew members had contact with human smugglers operating boats crowded with migrants, Cartosio said. One happened in September 2016, two in June.
“There were contacts, meetings, understandings,” between the group’s boat and the smugglers, the prosecutor, who is based in the Sicilian port city of Trapani, said.
The passengers on the human traffickers’ boats “weren’t saved” by the Iuventa, he alleged. Instead, migrants “were handed over” to the German group’s 33-meter (about 110-foot) -long boat and later transferred to Italian military vessels or other nonprofit vessels to be taken to Italian ports, Cartosio said.
Jugend Rettet’s web site says its “core team” is based in Berlin, has 11 members and consists mainly of young people.
“Their motivation derives from the will to rescue lives and to improve the humanitarian situation on the Mediterranean,” the site states.
Before Italian police announced the Iuventa’s seizure, Jugend Rettet tweeted that its boat had not been “confiscated” and none of the crew was arrested. It said its volunteers and staff were interviewed in Lampedusa, as they had been during previous visits to the island.
Cartosio stressed that no individual members of the crew had been charged and the investigation was ongoing to see which of them might have made contact with smugglers at sea. His office is leading the probe because some of the migrants the Iuventa took aboard were ultimately brought to Trapani, he said.
“There is no indication (the Iuventa crew) was paid,” by smugglers, “nor is there any element to make us thing there is a stable tie between the ship and Libyan traffickers,’ Cartosio said.
Any allegation that contacts between Jugend Rettet’s boat and the boats transporting migrants resulted from “coordinated planning” is tantamount to “science fiction,” Cartosio said. He stressed that traffickers were motivated by financial gain while the impulses of the rescue group’s members were humanitarian.
Police in Trapani said the Iuventa “is regularly devoted to the rescue of migrants near the Libyan coast” and that an investigation opened in October has uncovered information to suggest the vessel was used “to aid and abet clandestine immigration.”
A judge in Trapani, Sicily ordered the preventive seizure upon prosecutors’ request.
A few months ago, prosecutors in Trapani and in Catania, another Sicilian city, announced that they suspected some non-governmental organizations were using vessels to rescue migrants and at the same time helping the traffickers.


India plans AI ‘data city’ on staggering scale

Updated 56 min 27 sec ago
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India plans AI ‘data city’ on staggering scale

  • ‘The data city is going to come in one ecosystem ... with a 100 kilometer radius’

NEW DELHI: As India races to narrow the artificial intelligence gap with the United States and China, it is planning a vast new “data city” to power digital growth on a staggering scale, the man spearheading the project says.

“The AI revolution is here, no second thoughts about it,” said Nara Lokesh, information technology minister for Andhra Pradesh state, which is positioning the city of Visakhapatnam as a cornerstone of India’s AI push.

“And as a nation ... we have taken a stand that we’ve got to embrace it,” he said ahead of an international AI summit next week in New Delhi.

Lokesh boasts the state has secured investment agreements of $175 billion involving 760 projects, including a $15 billion investment by Google for its largest AI infrastructure hub outside the United States.

And a joint venture between India’s Reliance Industries, Canada’s Brookfield and US firm Digital Realty is investing $11 billion to develop an AI data center in the same city.

Visakhapatnam — home to around two million people and popularly known as “Vizag” — is better known for its cricket ground that hosts international matches than cutting-edge technology.

But the southeastern port city is now being pitched as a landing point for submarine internet cables linking India to Singapore.

“The data city is going to come in one ecosystem ... with a 100 kilometer radius,” Lokesh said. For comparison, Taiwan is roughly 100 kilometers wide.

Lokesh said the plan goes far beyond data connectivity, adding that his state had “received close to 25 percent of all foreign direct investments” to India in 2025.

“It’s not just about the data centers,” he explained while outlining a sweeping vision of change, with Andhra Pradesh offering land at one US cent per acre for major investors.