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Miami Herald
Miami Herald
National
David Goodhue

Cruise ship crew rescues 17 migrants who were ‘adrift and in need of assistance’

MIAMI — A Royal Caribbean crew rescued a group of migrants while the cruise ship was heading to the Bahamas on Sunday.

The cruise line and U.S. Coast Guard declined to comment on the nationalities of the people on the boat. But the rescue comes amid a surge in maritime migration from Cuba and Haiti. And the small boat the people were on is more characteristic of a Cuban migrant boat.

Royal Caribbean released a statement saying the crew of the Liberty of the Seas, which sails out of Port Everglades in Fort Lauderdale, launched a rescue boat after seeing the migrant vessel “adrift and in need of assistance.”

“The crew provided them with medical attention, and is working closely with the United States Coast Guard” the statement said.

Coast Guard spokeswoman Petty Officer Nicole Groll said because the rescue happened in Bahamian waters, the people were turned over to the Royal Bahamas Defense Force.

Groll said the Liberty of the Seas the day before reported spotting another boat with people in Bahamas waters. The Coast Guard has an agreement with the Bahamian government to assist when asked, Groll said.

If cruise ship crews come across a migrant vessel or other vessel in distress, sometimes they alert the Coast Guard and try to turn the mariners over to the agency.

“Other times, they will keep the rescued migrants or mariners on board and provide humanitarian care until their next port of call. If that is in the U.S., then they transfer rescued migrants to Customs and Border Protection Office of Field Operations custody for processing,” Groll said in a statement.

Meanwhile, migrant boats continue to make it past Coast Guard and other agencies on patrol — which now include state police agencies because of an executive order from Gov. Ron DeSantis in response to the latest migrant influx affecting South Florida and the Keys.

On Wednesday morning, the U.S. Border Patrol reported that a group of 15 Cubans made it to shore in a rustic vessel on Big Pine Key in the Lower Keys. According to a Border Patrol statement, the people departed from the Matanzas region on the northern coast of Cuba.

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