Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Deaths of 26 migrant teens, all females, spur investigat­ion

- MARWA ELTAGOURI AND HERMAN WONG

The gruesome discovery Sunday of the bodies of more than two dozen migrant women and girls in the Mediterran­ean Sea has left Italian officials wondering whether they were purposely killed, and why all who died were female.

Lorena Ciccotti, police chief in the southern Italian port city of Salerno, told CNN that officials have launched an investigat­ion into the migrants’ cause of death to see if they were tortured or sexually assaulted. Officials believe the 26 women and girls, who are all Nigerian and ranged from 14 to 18 years old, died attempting the dangerous journey from Libya to Europe over the weekend.

Libya is the biggest launchpad for African migrants hoping to build new lives in Europe. Since the collapse of Moammar Gadhafi’s regime, the number of migrants crossing the Mediterran­ean from Libya has soared. Sub-Saharan Africans wishing to flee poverty or war have taken advantage of Libya’s power vacuum, which has allowed smugglers to operate, for the most part, without restraint. Migrants’ desire to reach Italy — a country in close proximity to Libya — has made the North African country a center for human smuggling.

The trip across the Mediterran­ean is deadly — about 58 percent of the refugees

who have died this year during their cross-border migration have drowned in the Mediterran­ean, according to the Internatio­nal Organizati­on for Migration.

The women’s bodies were found in the Mediterran­ean by a Spanish vessel, which lowered a “seemingly endless line of black plastic body bags” onto a port in Salerno, according to Agence France-Presse.

The bodies were placed in coffins, the news agency reported. Twenty-three of the migrants were discovered near a rubber dinghy that officials believe sank on Friday, according to Agence France-Presse.

A top Salerno official, Salvatore Malfi, called the discovery a tragedy and told the news agency that authoritie­s will “need to see whether there are suspects to concentrat­e on or whether the murder inquiry will proceed against persons unknown.”

Malfi said the victims may have been thrown off their rubber dinghy into the waters of the Mediterran­ean, according to National Public Radio’s Sylvia Poggioli. “The cause of death appears to be by drowning.”

Women are more likely to drown because they cannot swim as well as men or because they sit on the lower levels of the vessels carrying them, away from life jackets, according to a 2012 study published by Sage journals. Women might also try to rescue their children from drowning, putting them at greater risk of death.

The Spanish ship managed on Sunday to rescue 90 women and 52 minors, including a newborn, officials told CNN. The rescue was one of four that altogether saved about 400 people over the weekend.

This year through Nov. 1, about 151,000 migrants survived the journey across the Mediterran­ean to Europe, according to the Internatio­nal Organizati­on for Migration. Almost 75 percent of those migrants, about 111,500 people, landed in Italy, with the rest reaching the shores of Greece, Cyprus and Spain. More than 2,800 migrants have died attempting the journey.

Since 2014, more than 400,000 migrants and refugees have crossed the Mediterran­ean from Libya to Italy. But the Italian government, facing an unending flow of people from Africa and an increase in anti-migrant sentiments from its people, wants to limit the thousands of refugees arriving on its shores each month. The government has therefore agreed to pay Libyan militias willing to clamp down on human smuggling.

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