A man is helped into the rescue MSF boat. As part of our Mediterranean migration response we rescued 96 people from the Central Mediterranean in September 2024.

Mediterranean migration

Putting Mediterranean migration in context

In 2023, 3,041 people died trying to cross the Mediterranean Sea.

The Mediterranean migration is brutal, both the journey and once migrants reach land. 

The vast majority of people attempting the Mediterranean crossing pass through Libya, where they are exposed to horrific levels of violence, including kidnapping, torture and extortion.

People in Libya are also often detained in detention centres, usually in horrendous conditions - and those in detention in Tripoli have been trapped in the ongoing conflict in the city, with some centres having been caught in airstrikes, with people unable to escape, and then killed or injured.

European attempts to stem migration by strengthening national borders and bolstering detention facilities outside its borders are pushing people into smugglers hands to get them past checkpoints, across borders, through fences, out of prisons and ultimately onto boats on the Mediterranean Sea.

For those people who do make it to Europe, the challenges - and dangers faced - start again once onshore. A lack of shelter, being forced to live in unhygienic conditions or in adverse weather, treacherous border crossings, hostile authorities - in these circumstances, people become sick, injured, or struggle with mental health issues.

Instead of confronting the vicious cycle that their own policies are creating, politicians have hidden behind unfounded accusations towards NGOs and individuals who attempt to help people in dire straits.

How MSF responds

MSF responds by conducting search and rescue operations within the Mediterranean Sea, by taking care of the rescued migrants onboard our boats through medical and humanitarian activities as well as operate dedicated land services to help people once they arrive on shore in Europe.
MSF Team on board the ship Geo Barents with a sign which reads, "Saving Lives is Not A Crime"
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How you can help

msf.org.za

By donating to MSF, you form part of, and enable, a network of individuals worldwide that help care for people and communities displaced or fleeing from their homes in the Mediterranean.

Donate Now
 
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