Migrant Offshore Aid Station
The Migrant Offshore Aid Station is an international humanitarian organisation based in Malta dedicated to providing aid and emergency medical relief to refugees and migrants around the world.
Founded in 2013 in response to the Mediterranean maritime migration phenomenon, today MOAS is working in Bangladesh to provide emergency medical care and assistance to Rohingya refugees fleeing from violence and persecution in Myanmar.
History
MOAS was set up after the tragedies of 2013 when two vessels, one carrying people from Eritrea and Somalia and one carrying Syrian refugees, capsized on the way from North Africa to Europe. Each year, thousands of people, mostly from sub-Saharan Africa, the Horn of Africa, and Syria, risk their lives when attempting this perilous crossing on rickety boats. MOAS was established to mitigate this loss of life at sea to the greatest extent possible. MOAS uses all its resources to assist the respective rescue coordination centres in locating and treating suffering human beings, and to save lives where required.Christopher and Regina Catrambonefounded the project in 2013 with the aim of alleviating the needless suffering of thousands of people seeking a safe and stable new home. MOAS has received various awards since it was set up, including Italy's Order of Meritand Malta's Medal for Service for the Republic. MOAS also received an award for Civic Engagement by the Today Public Policy Institute in November 2015. In 2016, MOAS received The Geuzen Medal.
Operation
MOAS’ operational team arrived in Bangladesh on 3 September 2017 and immediately conducted an in-depth needs assessment of the unfolding humanitarian crisis. Recognising the desperate need for food among recent arrivals, on 1 October 2017 MOAS' ship, the M/Y Phoenix, completed the first of two aid deliveries, transporting a total of 40 tonnes of rations.MOAS has established two ‘Aid Stations’, health centres where Rohingya refugees can receive primary medical care and where the host Bangladeshi community can access emergency services. The first Aid Station was launched on 14 October 2017 in the fishing community of Shamlapur, close to where refugees were arriving by sea, while the second was opened on 10 November 2017 to serve the remote refugee settlement of Unchiprang.
Missions
2014 mission in the Central Mediterranean
The Migration Offshore Aid Station inaugurated its first twenty-day mission on Monday 25 August 2014. It set sail from Malta’s Grand Harbour at around noon after a press conference held at the Birgu Marina. In the evening, as it returned close to Malta to pick up some equipment, the Phoenix came about a very worried Maltese fisherman whose boat was drifting off Delimara after its engine failed. The man managed to attract the attention of the MOAS crew by waving. The three-metre boat was tied up alongside the Phoenix until help was called.MOAS organised its first migrant rescue on 30 August when it assisted a group of 250 Syrians and Palestinians, including 40 children. On the same day, the Phoenix also assisted some 96 Sub-Saharan migrants from a rubber dinghy who were transferred onto a merchant ship. On 8 September, the Phoenix conducted two rescues involving almost 700 migrants, including 83 women and children. A two-day old infant was among the people saved.
A day later, another 500 migrants were rescued from two separate vessels, bringing the tally up to 1,500 migrants saved in less than two weeks at sea. MOAS rescued another 1,500 migrants throughout October, bringing the total number of lives saved to 3,000. MOAS launched its crowdfunding effort in October and by 2015 had already raised some $70,000. In February 2015, MOAS made a specific appeal to the maritime industry and mariners who are required to respond to emergencies. It said that seafarers transiting the Mediterranean would be especially affected by the numbers of refugees crossing from Libya to Italy after projects like the Italian mission Mare Nostrum were no longer in operation.
2015 mission in the Central Mediterranean
MOAS continued to operate in the Central Mediterranean Sea between May and September 2015, during which time it assisted almost 9,000 refugees, bringing its total number of lives saved until the end of 2015 to 12,000.Doctors Without Borders partnered with MOAS from May to September 2015 on board the MY Phoenix where they cared for 6,985 people rescued at sea after rescue by MOAS. The 6 person team included logistics, publicity and medical teams who cared for migrants on board the Phoenix needing treatment for conditions ranging from dehydration to gunshot wounds.
Mission in the Aegean Sea: December 2015 to March 2016
Having received a "tidal wave of support" in donations following the death of Alan Kurdi, MOAS expanded its mission to the Aegean Sea between December 2015 and April 2016.On 2 January, it announced that it has assisted a boat of 39 migrants, 11 of whom were injured by the violent impact on the sharp island rocks. A three-month old infant boy was severely hypothermic and was stabilized. On 12 January 2016, MOAS assisted a vessel of Syrian refugees who had washed ashore on the island of Agathonisi. The group included a two-year-old boy who became the first known migrant casualty that year.
For this mission, MOAS used the Topaz Responder, a 51-meter custom-made emergency response vessel, which hosts two high-speed rescue launches. These smaller rescue vessels are named Alan and Galip, in honour of the Kurdi brothers whose deaths shocked the world in September 2015.
In April 2016, the sharp fall in attempted crossings in the aftermath of the EU-Turkey deal and unfolding mass tragedies in the Central Mediterranean prompted the repositioning of all MOAS assets to the Central Mediterranean.
2016 mission in the Central Mediterranean
MOAS launched its 2016 Central Mediterranean operation on 6 June, rescuing and assisting over 20.000 men, women and children before the close of the year, during which MOAS’ SAR vessels operated in international waters 12-16 nautical miles off the coast of Libya. The 2016 Mission was run in conjunction with operational partners Red Cross Italy, who provided vital medical and psychosocial assistance, cultural mediation, food, clothing and emergency resources to the beneficiaries while they were on board.2017 mission in the Central Mediterranean
MOAS launched its 2017 Central Mediterranean operation on 1 April aboard the Phoenix and with their own medical team, and supported by a manned aerial asset. Over the Easter Weekend Rescue, MOAS’ crew members supervised an estimated 1,500 people overnight.End of Mediterranean missions
In September 2017, MOAS announced the ending of their missions in the Mediterranean, and their intent to transfer to assisting Myanmar's threatened Rohingya group of Muslims.Start of mission to Myanmar and Bangladesh
MOAS arrived in Bangladesh on 3 September 2017 and immediately conducted an in-depth needs assessment of the unfolding humanitarian crisis. Recognising the desperate need for food among the recent arrivals, on 1 October 2017 the Phoenix completed the first of two aid deliveries, transporting a total of 40 tonnes of rations.MOAS has established two ‘Aid Stations’, field clinics where Rohingya refugees can receive primary and secondary medical care and where the host Bangladeshi community can access our emergency services. The first Aid Station was launched on 14 October 2017 in the fishing community of Shamlapur, close to where refugees arrive by sea, while the second was opened on 10 November 2017 to serve the remote refugee settlement of Unchiprang.
The Aid Stations offer comprehensive services from triage to pharmacy, with a focus on providing life-saving reproductive, maternal, neonatal and child healthcare Each Station is equipped with a recovery suite, a maternity room, a surgical area, and an ambulance.
Their dedicated team of doctors, nurses, midwives, pharmacists and logisticians treat up to 300 people every day for a multitude of conditions including trauma, acute respiratory illnesses, severe gastric distress, severe malnutrition and fatigue. Reflecting the huge number of young people living in the refugee camps, over 40% of their patients are children.
Funding
Since 2015, MOAS has been privately funded through the support of the public, grant-making organisations, crowd-funding initiatives, foundations and corporate sponsorship. Operations partners, such as MSF, Red Cross Italy, and the International Federation of the Red Cross, have also been major contributors to MOAS missions. MOAS’ annual reports and financial statements are available on the .In march 2016 the Global Impact network announced to have collected about 1.5 Million USD for MOAS.