KALAMATA: Greek rescuers on Thursday scoured the Ionian Sea for survivors a day after a fishing boat overloaded with migrants capsized and sank, killing at least 78 people, with fears that the toll could eventually run into the hundreds.

As relatives in the migrants’ home countries frantically sought details of their loved ones, the coastguard said 78 bodies had been recovered and 104 people saved from the sea so far.

But hundreds more may be missing, judging from the testimony from survivors and the fact that no women and children have yet been rescued.

“This could be the worst maritime tragedy in Greece in recent years,” Stella Nanou of the UNHCR refugee agency told state broadcaster ERT.

One survivor told hospital doctors in Kalamata that he had seen a hundred children in the boat’s hold, ERT reported. “It’s really horrific,” UNHCR staffer Erasmia Roumana said at the port of Kalamata.

Photographs handed out by the coastguard showed a rusty blue boat with scores of people crammed on deck.

“It was like an abandoned ship... we saw no lifesavers or lifejackets either on (the migrants) or the boat,” local rescuer Constantinos Vlachonikolos told state radio.

“We’ve never seen anything like this before.” Two patrol boats, a navy frigate, three helicopters and nine other ships were searching the waters west of the Peloponnese peninsula, one of the deepest parts of the Medi­terranean, a coastguard spokeswoman said.

Questions over rescue

The coastguard said a surveillance plane with Europe’s Frontex agency had spotted the boat on Tuesday afternoon, but that the passengers had “refused any help”.

The boat’s engine gave up shortly before 2300 GMT on Tuesday and the vessel later capsized, Siakantaris said, sinking in around 10 to 15 minutes.

Alexiou, the coastguard spokesman, suggested that the boat might have capsized earlier if the coastguard had attempted to intervene.

“You cannot divert a boat with so many people on board by force unless there is cooperation,” he said. It was “fortunate” that rescue ships were nearby or more lives would have been lost, he added.

But leftist former prime minister Alexis Tsipras, who spoke to survivors at the port, said they had “called for help”. “What sort of protocol does not call for the rescue... of an overloaded boat about to sink?” he asked.

The head of Frontex, Hans Leijtens, arrived in Greece on Thursday “to better understand what happened since Frontext played a part”.

Published in Dawn, June 16th, 2023

Opinion

Editorial

Delicate balance
Updated 13 Mar, 2026

Delicate balance

PAKISTAN has to maintain a delicate balance where the geopolitics of the US-Israeli aggression against Iran are...
Soaring costs
13 Mar, 2026

Soaring costs

FOR millions of households already grappling with Ramazan inflation, the sharp increase in petrol and diesel prices...
Perilous lines
13 Mar, 2026

Perilous lines

THE law minister’s veiled warning to the media to “exercise caution” and not cross “red lines” while...
Collective security
Updated 12 Mar, 2026

Collective security

Regional states need to sit down and talk. They must also pledge and work towards collective security.
Spectrum leap
12 Mar, 2026

Spectrum leap

THE sale of 480 MHz of fifth-generation telecom spectrum for $507m is a major milestone in Pakistan’s digital...
Toxic fallout
12 Mar, 2026

Toxic fallout

WARS can leave environmental scars that remain long after the fighting is over. The strikes on Iran’s oil...