Gulf Times

19 drown as migrant boat sinks off Cyprus

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At least 19 migrants drowned and up to 30 were missing yesterday after their boat sank in the Mediterran­ean off the north of Cyprus, local security forces said.

The boat was carrying 150 people, reportedly Syrians, when it went down off the coast of the breakaway Turkish Cypriot-controlled portion of the island, which is only recognised by Ankara.

More than 100 people were rescued in a joint operation by Turkish Cypriot and Turkish coastguard­s after the boat sank off the village of Gialousa (Yeni Erenkoy in Turkish) on the panhandle Karpas peninsula.

At least 19 drowned and between 25 and 30 were still missing, the Turkish Cypriot security forces (GKK) said in a statement.

One was taken by helicopter to Cyprus in grave medical condition, the GKK added.

The other survivors were however being taken by ship to the port of Tasucu in Turkey’s southern Mersin region.

Search efforts were underway to recover the missing with commercial vessels also taking part, reports said.

The Turkish coastguard said in a statement that the accident took place 30km off the shore of northern Cyprus. It said that 103 survivors had been rescued. Turkey’s DHA news agency said those on board the vessel were Syrians seeking to go to Europe but this had yet to be confirmed.

Cyprus, some 160km from Syria’s coast, has not seen the massive inflow of migrants experience­d by Turkey, Greece and Italy although asylum applicatio­ns have risen sharply.

According to the Internatio­nal Organisati­on for Migration, 47,637 migrants and refugees entered Europe by sea up to July with only 47 entering Cyprus.

In the same period, 1,404 people lost their lives in the crossings, mostly those trying to cross from Africa to Italy or Malta.

Cyprus has been divided since 1974 when Turkish troops invaded and occupied the

northern third of the island in response to a Greek military junta-sponsored coup.

“The Mediterran­ean must stop being a cemetery for refugees,” Turkish Cypriot president Mustafa Akinci said after the disaster.

Turkey has however been one of the hubs for migrants and refugees fleeing Syria and other trouble spots like Afghanista­n and Iraq.

More than a mn people, many fleeing the war in Syria, crossed to European Union member Greece from Turkey in 2015 after the onset of the bloc’s worst migration crisis since World War II.

Turkey struck a deal with the EU in 2016 in an effort to stem the flow of migrants, and agreed to take back illegal migrants landing on Greek islands in exchange for incentives including financial aid.

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