Over 40 dead - two more boats sink in the Mediterranean
12 Oct The independent
Over 40 people died tonight and more were feared to have drowned
after two boats packed with migrants being smuggled across the
Mediterranean into Europe sank.
One of the boats capsized off Lampedusa, the Italian island where 339
people drowned last week in one of the worst migrant shipping disasters
in the Mediterranean, which prompted demands in Europe for action
against the traffickers.In today’s disasters, at least 248 people were
pitched into the water when their boat got into trouble off Lampedusa,
while more than 120 swam for their lives when a vessel capsized close to
the port of Alexandria in Egypt.
A dozen people died off the Egyptian coast, with 116 people being
rescued and taken to a nearby naval base. The coastguard said the
survivors comprised 72 Palestinians, 40 Syrians and four Egyptians.But
the scale of tonight’s sinking off Lampedusa, in a chilling echo of last
week’s disaster, was even worse, with early reports suggesting a death
toll of 50. The Maltese Prime Minister Joseph Muscat said at least 27
bodies had already been recovered, of whom three were children.
The vessel was 65 miles south-east of the island when a rescue
mission was launched after a distress call was made from the boat on a
satellite phone. The satellite co-ordinates pinpointed its position.A
Maltese aircraft spotted the upturned boat and reported that scores of
people were in the water.
The plane’s crew dropped a life raft, and a patrol boat soon reached
the area to start picking up survivors.In the joint Maltese-Italian
rescue operation at least 221 people were picked up alive from the water
with survivors being flown by helicoper for treatment in Lampedusa.
Commander Marco Maccaroni of the Italian navy said 150 survivors were
taken on board a Maltese ship, 56 on an Italian patrol boat and 15 more
by a fishing boat. It was unclear if the injured were included in the
totals.
The capsizing occurred a week after a migrant vessel from Libya
caught fire and sank with some 500 people on board near Lampedusa. Only
155 survived. Recovery efforts continued yesterday, bringing the toll up
to 339, including a newborn with its umbilical cord still attached.In
recent months, increasing numbers of Syrian migrants have been fleeing
Egypt – in large part due to the rising levels of discrimination and
xenophobia which followed the popular coup against former President
Mohamed Morsi. A six-day voyage to Sicily from north Africa can cost
more than £2,000 per person, with many forced to sell their belongings
to secure a spot. According to the UN’s refugee agency, more than 3,400
refugees have attempted to make the crossing from Egypt to Europe since
August this year. Once in Italy, the migrants are screened and often
sent back home if they don’t qualify for asylum.
During the 1990s and early 2000s, many of the arrivals were
considered “economic migrants”. But many of the latest arrivals are
fleeing persecution and conflict in places such as Syria and Egypt, and
qualify for refugee status, UN officials say. Many eventually end up in
northern Europe’s larger and more organised immigrant communities.During
a visit to Lampedusa this week, European Commission President Jose
Manuel Barroso promised Italy some €30m in EU funds to better care for
newly arrived migrants, and Italian officials pledged to put the issue
on the agenda of an upcoming European Union summit and on the EU agenda
next year. |