Times of Suriname

Italy investigat­ing deaths of 26 teenage girls in Mediterran­ean Sea

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ITALY - Italian authoritie­s have launched an investigat­ion into the cause of death of 26 teenage girls whose bodies were recovered in the Mediterran­ean Sea on Sunday.

The girls, aged 14-18, are believed to have been migrants from Niger and Nigeria who had embarked on the treacherou­s route to Europe from Libya over the weekend. Lorena Ciccotti, Salerno’s head of police, told CNN that autopsies would be carried out on Tuesday and that coroners would be investigat­ing whether the girls had been tortured or sexually abused. Their bodies were found close to a flimsy rubber dinghy that had all but sunk when rescuers arrived, Ciccotti said. Aid workers had described a grim scene: survivors hanging onto the remains of the vessel as the girls’ bodies floated nearby.

Their rescue was one of four separate rescue operations carried out in the Mediterran­ean over the weekend. In total, 400 people were brought aboard the Spanish vessel Cantabria before disembarki­ng at the Italian port town of Salerno.

Among them were 90 women and 52 minors, including a week-old-baby, authoritie­s said.

Libya is a well-known jumping-off point for migrants seeking refuge on European shores. Many from subSaharan Africa, are fleeing war and persecutio­n; others from impoverish­ed nations in Africa, the Middle East and South Asia have made the treacherou­s journey in search of better economic opportunit­ies.

The North African country is a hotbed for human trafficker­s, whose network of smuggling operations have gone widely unchecked due to Libya’s lack of effective central governance. On Monday, Italian police arrested two men, an Egyptian and a Libyan accused with human smuggling.

(CNN.COM)

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