Muscat Daily

Surge in deadly crossings from crisis-hit Lebanon, says charity

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Beirut, Lebanon - The number of people attempting to make the deadly sea crossing to Cyprus from Lebanon has surged this year, Save the Children said on Wednesday.

‘September saw a significan­t uptick in crossings with 230 people travelling on five boats pushed back to Lebanon after attempting the journey to Cyprus by sea,’ it said.

Save the Children said 21 crossings had been attempted to Cyprus between July and September, more than the 17 reported for the whole of 2019.

Most of the attempted crossings usually depart from Lebanon’s northern coast, in the Tripoli area.

The Republic of Cyprus lies just 160km away.

According to the army and aid groups, several people have drowned or died of health complicati­ons while drifting at sea in recent weeks.

Most of the would-be migrants are already refugees who fled the war in neighbouri­ng Syria but an increasing number of Lebanese nations are attempting the perilous journey.

Lebanon, which hosts nearly 1.5mn Syrian refugees, was struggling from a severe economic crisis and political instabilit­y even before the coronaviru­s pandemic struck.

That was exacerbate­d by the massive August 4 explosion at Beirut's port, which laid waste to entire neighbourh­oods and killed close to 200 people.

 ??  ?? This file photo shows refugees after being rescued from a boat in the Mediterran­ean Sea on June 15, 2017
This file photo shows refugees after being rescued from a boat in the Mediterran­ean Sea on June 15, 2017

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