At least ten migrants drown off Turkey, several missing

Published January 30, 2016
A migration monitoring agency says deaths of refugees and migrants crossing the Aegean Sea between Turkey and Greece are "increasing at an alarming rate" as 218 people have died in January on that eastern Mediterranean route.— AP
A migration monitoring agency says deaths of refugees and migrants crossing the Aegean Sea between Turkey and Greece are "increasing at an alarming rate" as 218 people have died in January on that eastern Mediterranean route.— AP

AYVACIK: At least ten migrants, including five children, drowned on Saturday when their boat sank in the Aegean Sea while trying to cross from Turkey to Greece, the Turkish coastguard said.

An unknown number of people were still missing after the latest in a long list of migrant boat sinkings in the Mediterranean.

So far, 43 passengers had been rescued, the private Dogan news agency reported.

“We are sad. At least 20 friends are still missing,” one weeping survivor told an AFP photographer at the scene.

The migrants, who included Syrian and Afghan refugees, had set off from the district of Ayvacik in Canakkale province in an apparent bid to reach the Greek island of Lesbos.

Turkey, which is hosting at least 2.5 million refugees from Syria's civil war, has become the main launchpad for migrants fleeing war, persecution and poverty to Europe.

The Turkish government struck a deal with the EU in November to halt the outflow of refugees, in return for 3 billion euros ($3.2 billion) in financial assistance.

Neither the deal nor the winter conditions appear to have deterred the migrants, who continue to pay people smugglers thousands of dollars for the risky crossing in overloaded boats.

The International Organisation for Migration (IOM) said this week 45,361 migrants had arrived in Greece by sea so far this year, 31 times more than for all of January 2015.

Some 90 per cent of the new arrivals were from Syria, Iraq and Afghanistan, it added.

Opinion

Editorial

Back in parliament
Updated 27 Jul, 2024

Back in parliament

It is ECP's responsibility to set right all the wrongs it committed in the Feb 8 general elections.
Brutal crime
27 Jul, 2024

Brutal crime

No effort has been made to even sensitise police to the gravity of crime involving sexual assaults, let alone train them to properly probe such cases.
Upholding rights
27 Jul, 2024

Upholding rights

Sanctity of rights bodies, such as the HRCP, should be inviolable in a civilised environment.
Judicial constraints
Updated 26 Jul, 2024

Judicial constraints

The fact that it is being prescribed by the legislature will be questioned, given the political context.
Macabre spectacle
26 Jul, 2024

Macabre spectacle

Israel knows that regardless of the party that wins the presidency, America’s ‘ironclad’ support for its genocidal endeavours will continue.