Over 230 people stranded on Maltese waters after neither Italy nor Malta give permission to disembark passengers.

There is growing uncertainty over the fate of hundreds of migrants and refugees as a rescue ship remained stranded at sea for a fifth day after both Italy and Malta refused to give it docking approval.

Lifeline, a ship belonging to a German NGO of the same name, remained stuck on Maltese waters on Monday with 234 Africans onboard, who were rescued in the Mediterannean on Wednesday. Among them are four children younger than three.

Italy’s far-right Interior Minister Matteo Salvini said on Monday that the vessel, which is moored about 30 nautical miles (56 kilometres) off Malta, will not be allowed to dock in Italy.

Salvini had bluntly told foreign charities on Sunday to stop rescuing migrants and refugees off Libya, where one group said 1,000 people were on boats in distress.

“The Italians told us the responsibility is on the Libyans,” Claus-Peter Reisch, Lifeline captain, told The Associated Press news agency. “And the Libyans, if you try to call them, they don’t pick up the phone.”

The mayor of the Spanish city of Barcelona has offered his help but the harbour cannot be reached because of bad weather and distance, according to Lifeline spokesman Ruben Neugebauer.

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At the moment, the ship carries enough food and water for all passengers on board.

Lifeline’s cofounder Axel Steier told AFP news agency that the Dutch-registered vessel was turned away by the Italian authorities and told to go to Libya.

An email sent by Lifeline to the Libyan coastguard remains unanswered, according to Steier.

Lifeline on Monday asked for permission to berth in France.

“The problem is that we have 234 people on a 30-metre-long boat near a developed country and Europe is watching these people slowly waste away,” Steier said.

Separately, Italian news agency Ansa quoted Steier telling France’s RTL radio that the rescued ship had been “refused by Germany, Holland and Italy”.

“Today we’ll ask France to receive us. If we don’t get a response, we’ll head north, to Spain or France.”

Stranded at sea

As the people on board await their fate, European Union (EU) members struggled to find a solution to the migration crisis at emergency talks in Brussels on Sunday.

To discuss the issue, Salvini, who is also one of Italy’s two deputy prime ministers, also held meetings with Libyan officials, including Interior Minister Abdelsalam Ashour in Libya’s capital, Tripoli, on Monday.

“We believe that it should be only the Libyan authorities who control Libyan waters,” he said. “We support blocking non-government-organisations from these waters, who want to replace governments and help illegal immigrants.”

The Lifeline is among a number of ships that remains stranded after being refused to dock at nearby ports.

The Aquarius, which is jointly operated by SOS Mediterranee and Doctors Beyond Borders (known by its French acronym MSF), suffered a similar fate earlier this month before it was allowed to dock in Spain.

It is currently stuck off Libyan waters after returning from the Spanish port of Valencia.

The Dutch-flagged Seefuchs, of the German NGO Sea-Eye, is docked in the Maltese capital, Valetta, where authorities are checking if it is indeed registered in the Netherlands.

Italy, a country on the front line of the crisis, has turned away rescue vessels, with its new populist government demanding greater solidarity from reluctant fellow EU states.