The Manila Times

Bodies of 74 migrants wash up on Libya beach

- AFP

HARCHA, Libya: The bodies of 74 migrants who drowned in the Mediterran­ean trying to reach Europe have washed up on a beach west of the Libyan capital, the Red Crescent said Tuesday.

Residents of the village of Harcha, outside Zawiya, 45 kilometers (30 miles) from Tripoli, alerted the emer boat on the beach with bodies inside, the Red Crescent said.

More were discovered elsewhere on the beach and still more were feared to be in the sea.

A long row of black and white body bags was seen lined up near the water’s edge.

“We don’t have an appropriat­e vehicle to transport the bodies or a bury them in,” the group said.

“Some bodies are still on the beach and others that we can’t reach are still

The Internatio­nal Organizati­on for Migration (IOM) said the boat was reported to have foundered on Sunday, leaving as many as 100 people dead.

engine and agency said.

“A survivor, reportedly in a coma, was transferre­d to hospital.”

the deaths would bring the total number of migrants killed trying to cross the Mediterran­ean so far this year to more than 365.

It said that 187 migrants were rescued off Zawiya on Saturday, and were currently being held in a detention center.

The tragedy is believed to be the worst since around 180 people were estimated to have died on January 14 when a migrant boat capsized off the coast of Libya.

Since then, hundreds of people have been plucked from the waters north of the African nation, including 700 on January 30 alone off the western city of Sabratha. left it to drift,” the

‘What price #humanity?’

On Tuesday, Italy’s coast guard said it rescued around another 630 migrants off the coast of Libya from two drifting vessels, a large boat and a rubber raft.

“74 bodies on a Libyan shore. Each testament to #indifferen­ce, a tragedy, entirely preventabl­e. What price #humanity?” tweeted Elhadj As Sy, head of the Internatio­nal Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies (IFRC).

The IOM said migrant arrivals in Italy had risen sharply this year compared with the same period of 2016.

As of Sunday, 10,120 had arrived compared with 6,589 between January 1 and February 18 last year.

People smugglers have taken advantage of the chaos gripping Libya since the 2011 revolution to greatly boost their lucrative trade.

Most departures take place from the west of Libya, usually heading for Italy 300 kilometers away across the Mediterran­ean.

Europeans are considerin­g measures aimed at blocking the arrival of thousands of migrants, alarming NGOs which fear that those stranded in Libya may suffer mistreatme­nt.

In the absence of an army or a regular police force in Libya, several militias act as coastguard­s but are often accused themselves of complicity or even involvemen­t in the peoplesmug­gling business.

UN Libya envoy Martin Kobler visited a migrants’ camp in Tripoli on Tuesday, and said he would be discussing their voluntary repatriati­on with the authoritie­s.

“They do not have enough food. They have really a serious situation here and it’s very important to solve their humanitari­an problem,” he said.

“If they want to return they must be given the chance to return.”

According to the United Nations, more than 5,000 people died last year in attempts to cross the Mediterran­ean to reach Europe, most of them after embarking from the Libyan coast after paying people smugglers.

This was the highest annual toll on record.

Unlike previous years, winter has not brought an end to the migrant arrivals, just a reduction in the numbers.

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