Arab Times

Egyptian court jails 56 over migrant boat shipwreck

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File photo shows young Egyptians detained at a police station sleeping on the floor in Rosetta, Egypt, after being rescued from a boat capsized off the Mediterran­ean coast near the Egyptian city of Alexandria, on Sept 21, 2016. Egypt’s official news agency MENA said the boat was carrying 600 people when it sank near the coast,

some 180 km (112 miles) north of the capital, Cairo. (AP) An Egyptian court sentenced 56 people to prison terms of up to 14 years on Sunday over the capsizing of a boat that killed over 200 people, one of the deadliest disasters in the dangerous Mediterran­ean crossings of migrants to Europe.

The boat capsized off the Egyptian coast on Sept 21. Rescue workers and fishermen rescued at least 169 people, but at least 202 died.

Fifty-seven people faced charges including causing the accidental death of 202 passengers, not using sufficient rescue equipment, endangerin­g lives, receiving money from the victims, hiding suspects from authoritie­s and using a vessel without a licence. One woman was acquitted.

The boat sank in the Mediterran­ean off Burg Rashid, a village in Egypt’s northern Beheira province where the sea and the Nile meet. It had been carrying Egyptian, Sudanese, Eritrean and Somali migrants and was believed to be heading for Italy.

One month after the boat sank Egypt’s parliament passed legislatio­n setting prison terms and fines for those found guilty of smuggling migrants, acting as brokers or facilitati­ng migrants’ journeys.

A record 5,000 migrants drowned in the Mediterran­ean last year, aid agencies have said. In the worst known incident, around 500 African migrants and their children died when a fishing boat capsized off Egypt’s coast in April.

Since Turkey and the European Union reached an agreement a year ago to curb the flow of migrants and refugees sailing from Turkish shores to Greece, most migrant journeys have taken the more dangerous route from north Africa to Italy.

In Libya, people trafficker­s have operated with relative ease, but many migrants and refugees also set off from Egypt. (RTRS)

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