As Sea-Watch 4 The activists set out on their mission on 15 August 2020 from the Spanish port of
Burriana in the province of
Castellón and headed for the central Mediterranean. On 22 August they took over seven people from another rescue ship off
Libya in the sea area off
Tripoli and the smugglers' stronghold of
az-Zawiya. Italian media identified this second ship as a former speedboat of the French customs (DF 42), which is now operated as
Louise Michel, also by German activists under the German flag and which had been anchored days earlier together with the
Sea-Watch 4 in Burriana. Another 97 people were brought on board on 23 August followed by around 100 migrants the following day. Several EU states and the Red Cross then negotiated about the landing of the migrants in the
European Union. The ship was finally allowed to call at
Palermo, where the 353 migrants were transferred to the GNV Allegra ferry on 2 September for a two-week quarantine.
As Humanity 1 According to their own information, the crew of the Humanity 1 rescued 200 boat migrants from distress at sea on December 2 and 3, 2023 and brought them to the southern Italian port city of
Crotone. The Italian authorities then detained the ship. The blockade is valid for 20 days and a fine of 3,333 euros has also been imposed. The operating organization wants to take legal action and sue against the arrest in the port city in
Calabria. In December 2025
Humanity 1 was put under detention and fined 10,000 euros by authorities for 20 days for not coordinating rescue efforts with the Libyan coastguard. On 13 February 2026 the activists picked up 33 migrants. They did not coordinate with the Libyan Rescue Coordination Center, citing potential Human rights violations and
Humanity 1 headed for Italy instead. Italian authorities put the ship under detention in
Trapani for 60 Days and fined the NGO with 10,000 euros. == References ==