Gulf News

Al Sissi promises jobs to deter migration

Poverty has driven thousands of Egyptians to undertake dangerous voyages to Europe

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Egypt’s President Abdul Fattah Al Sissi yesterday pledged more jobs for Egyptians to help dissuade them from making dangerous voyages to Europe after more than 160 migrants died when a boat capsized off the country’s Mediterran­ean coast.

Rescue workers and fishermen recovered five more bodies on Sunday, taking the death toll in the September 21 shipwreck to 169, with another 169 migrants having been rescued.

Security sources and the state Mena news agency initially said up to 600 people may have been aboard the boat, suggesting hundreds more may be lost at sea. But some survivors have estimated the number of people on the vessel at closer to 400.

Survivors and their families said poverty and a lack of jobs and opportunit­y along with political repression in Egypt have driven thousands to embark on perilous journeys in rickety boats across the Mediterran­ean to Europe.

More and more migrants have been trying to cross to Italy from the African coast over the summer months, particular­ly from Libya, where peopletraf­fickers operate with relative impunity.

But boats have increasing­ly departed from Egypt as Libya has slid deeper into anarchy.

Speaking at the opening of a housing project in the coastal city of Alexandria, Al Sissi said there was no “justificat­ion or excuse” for the loss of life in last week’s shipwreck but that securing the coastline and borders was a tough challenge.

He said factories and fisheries were being built in the Kafr Al Shaikh area, from where the doomed boat departed, to create jobs and hope for locals. Kafr Al Shaikh, in Egypt’s Nile Delta, has emerged as a hub for a trade smuggling migrants to Europe.

“There is hope .. especially in this place where the migrant boat sank, but we can’t overcome all obstacles and put an end to them in one, two or four years,” Al Sissi said.

Fish farming project

“A project will be set up for fish farming. It may be the largest in Egypt, but putting a project into action takes time.”

About 400 people gathered yesterday on the shores of Burg Rashid, near where the boat capsized, waiting for the bodies of about 50 missing Egyptians to be recovered, a Reuters witness said. It was not clear how many non-Egyptians remained missing but the Internatio­nal Organisati­on for Migration has said the migrants included Sudanese, Ethiopians and Eritreans.

As he waited on the coast with other relatives of missing people, one man suddenly cried out “Allahu Akbar” (God is Greatest) after his son phoned him to say he had made it across to Italy aboard another boat. The father had feared his son was among those killed in the shipwreck.

The IOM says more than 3,200 migrants have died while trying to traverse the Mediterran­ean this year.

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