6.19 If survivor status or other non-SAR matters
need to be resolved, the appropriate authorities can often handle
these matters once the survivors have been delivered to a place of
safety. Until then, RCCs are responsible for co-operation with any
national or international authorities or others involved in the situation.
Examples of non-SAR considerations that may require attention include
oil spills, onscene investigations, salvage, survivors who are migrants
or asylum seekers, needs of survivors once they have been delivered
to a place of safety, or security or law enforcement concerns. National
authorities other than the RCC typically have primary responsibility
for such efforts.
6.20 Any operations and procedures such as screening
and status assessment of rescued persons that go beyond rendering
assistance to persons in distress should not be allowed to hinder
the provision of such assistance or unduly delay disembarkation of
survivors from the assisting ship(s).
6.21 Although issues other than rescue relating
to asylum seekers, refugees and migratory status are beyond the remit
of IMO, and beyond the scope of the SOLAS and SAR Conventions, Governments
should be aware of assistance that international organizations or
authorities of other countries might be able to provide in such cases,
be able to contact them rapidly, and provide any instructions that
their RCCs may need in this regard, including how to alert and involve
appropriate national authorities. States should ensure that their
response mechanisms are sufficiently broad to account for the full
range of State responsibilities.
6.22 Authorities responsible for such matters
may request that RCCs obtain from the assisting ship certain information
about a ship or other vessel in distress, or certain information about
the persons assisted. Relevant national authorities should also be
made aware of what they need to do to co-operate with the RCC (especially
with regard to contacting ships), and to respond as a matter of urgency
to situations involving assisted persons aboard ships.