A healthy baby
boy was born today, September 12th, on board MV Aquarius, a search and rescue
vessel run in partnership between MSF and SOS Mediterranee.
He was born at
7:00 am ship's time in international waters to Nigerian parents, who have named
him Newman Otas. His parents, Otas and Faith, and older brothers Victory,
seven, and Rollres, five, were rescued from an overcrowded rubber boat 24 hours
earlier.
Currently 392
people are on board after two rubber boats were rescued and one transfer
accepted: 155 people on board are under 18, 141 of them are traveling alone – without a parent or
guardian accompanying them. There are 11 children under five and now four
babies under a year.
"I was
very stressed on the rubber boat, sitting on the floor of the boat with the
other women and children" Faith recounts. "Panicking that I would go
into labour. I could feel my baby moving, he would move down and then move back
up again. I had been having contractions for three days."
MSF Midwife
Jonquil Nicholl, who delivered the baby said:
"A very normal birth in dangerously abnormal conditions. I am
filled with horror at the thought of what would have happened if this baby had
arrived 24 hours earlier; in that unseaworthy rubber boat, with fuel on the
bottom where the women sit, crammed in with no space to move, at the mercy of
the sea,"
And 48 hours
previously they were waiting on a beach in Libya not knowing what was ahead of
them.
"How can
this still this still happen in 2016? That families, vulnerable people,
pregnant women, tiny babies and unborn babies are forced to risk their lives in
the Mediterranean Sea when they should be receiving assistance and protection"
she added.




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