The Daily Telegraph - Saturday

More than 80 migrants die in twin-boat Med disasters

- By Nick Squires in Rome

MORE than 80 migrants are feared to have died in the Mediterran­ean in twin tragedies as they tried to reach the shores of Italy and Greece.

Yesterday Turkish officials said that 22 migrants, including at least five children, drowned after their boat capsized off Turkey’s largest island, Gokceada, which is also known as Imbros.

The migrants’ nationalit­ies were not clear, but in recent years tens of thousands of Syrians, Iraqis and Afghans have crossed the Aegean in boats organised by smugglers.

“The Turkish coastguard found the bodies of 22 people,” the local governor’s office said in a statement.

There has been a rise in the number of migrants and refugees trying to cross the Aegean in recent weeks.

In the second incident, around 60 people who tried to cross by boat from Libya to Italy were reported to have died of hunger and thirst. The motor on their boat broke down and they drifted at sea for more than a week. The fatalities included women and at least one child, according to survivors.

Around 25 survivors from Mali, Senegal and Gambia were found on a deflating rubber dinghy in the middle of the Mediterran­ean. The dinghy was spotted by the Ocean Viking, a rescue ship belonging to the organisati­on SOS Méditerran­ée. “These people saw many of their dear ones die,” one of the rescuers, identified only as Massimo, said in a video released by the NGO.

Two of the migrants were unconsciou­s and had to evacuated by the Italian military by helicopter to Sicily. The other 23 were dehydrated, traumatise­d and had burns from fuel.

 ?? ?? Rescuers attend to survivors on the deflating rubber dinghy in the middle of the Mediterran­ean Sea on which passengers were left without food or water for several days
Rescuers attend to survivors on the deflating rubber dinghy in the middle of the Mediterran­ean Sea on which passengers were left without food or water for several days

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