Gulf Today

22 killed as truck carrying migrants crashes in Turkey

Among dead were two babies, two children and a pregnant woman

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ISTANBUL: Twenty-two people, including children, died on Sunday when a vehicle carrying migrants reportedly heading for EU member Greece plunged off the highway into a waterway in western Turkey.

The vehicle was travelling on a highway near Izmir airport when it lipped over and fell into the channel several metres below, state-run Anadolu news agency said.

The nationalit­y of the migrants was not immediatel­y clear, but 22 people died in the crash and another 13 others were hurt, the agency said, hiking an earlier toll of 19 dead.

Turkish television pictures showed the wreckage of the vehicle upside-down in the river channel, reduced to burned-out metal by the impact of the crash with corpses strewn alongside it.

Rescue workers later used a crane to lift it on to the road, with images showing the vehicle’s back end was simply an open container into which the migrants had been crammed.

DRIVER SURVIVES

The DHA news agency said the driver, a 35-year-old Turkish national, had survived, telling police he had swerved to avoid an oncoming white vehicle.

The man had a standard ‘B’ licence to drive a car did not have the required papers to drive a vehicle of that size, it said. The truck had been hired for four days.

Among the dead were two babies, two children and a pregnant woman, it said.

The driver was expected to be arrested after leaving hospital, Anadolu reported, saying regional prosecutor­s had opened an investigat­ion.

DHA said the vehicle was headed for the coast of the Izmir region, from where the migrants were to have tried to reach Greece’s Samos island. In the truck with them were several inflatable dinghies.

Samos is just a few kilometres north of Turkey’s Dilek peninsula that juts out from the Izmir region.

KEY TRANSIT POINT

Turkey is a key transit point for migrants from troubled countries in the Middle East, Asia and Africa seeking a new life in Europe.

A million mi grants crossed from turkey into Greece in 2015, mostly by boats, in a crisis which forced a deal between Ankara and the EU to stem the low of people.

Numbers have fallen since but people are still undertakin­g what is a highly perilous journey and the low has ticked up this year from 2017.

 ?? Agence France-presse ?? Turkish police forensic experts examine the wreckage of a truck, carrying migrants, after it crashed in Izmir, on Sunday.
Agence France-presse Turkish police forensic experts examine the wreckage of a truck, carrying migrants, after it crashed in Izmir, on Sunday.

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