Chattanooga Times Free Press

Feared drowning of 400 migrants raises alarms

- BY COLLEEN BARRY

MILAN — The feared drowning of 400 migrants in a shipwreck this week in the Mediterran­ean Sea — one of the deadliest such tragedies in the last decade — raised alarms Wednesday amid an unpreceden­ted wave of migration toward Europe from Africa and the Middle East.

The U.N. refugee agency expressed shock at the scale of the deaths in Monday’s capsizing and renewed calls on European government­s to redouble search and rescue efforts, while the Internatio­nal Organizati­on for Migration maintained that the situation had reached “crisis proportion­s.”

The Mediterran­ean “has emerged as the most dangerous” of four major sea routes used by the world’s refugees and migrants, taken by 219,000 people last year, U.N. High Commission­er for Refugees Antonio Guterres said.

The Italian Coast Guard rescued some 140 people off the coast of Libya on Monday and recovered nine bodies, but could see immediatel­y from the size of the capsized smuggler’s boat that there had likely been hundreds more on board.

The rescue was made during a five- day surge that saw Italian ships save nearly 10,000 people at sea since Friday — an unpreceden­ted rate in such a short period, according to Cmdr. Filippo Marini, a Coast Guard spokesman. The number is only likely to grow, with summer weather encouragin­g even more people fleeing poverty and conflict to make the perilous crossing.

Survivors of Monday’s shipwreck reported that as many as 550 people were on board, according to aid workers.

“Of course this is an estimate. No one who travels knows exactly the number. They don’t get a ticket that says: No. 550,” said Barbara Molinario, the U. N. High Commission­er for Refugees spokeswoma­n in Italy.

Accounts by survivors, mostly sub-Saharan Africans, indicate the ship capsized when men on the upper deck rushed to wave down a ship they believed to be a rescue vessel, said IOM spokesman Joel Millman in Geneva.

“Many were waving and gesticulat­ing to get attention and that caused the vessel to capsize, with the speculatio­n that women and children who were below deck were drowned instantly,” Millman said.

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Rescued migrants wait to disembark from an Italian Navy vessel in the harbor of Reggio Calabria, southern Italy, on Tuesday.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Rescued migrants wait to disembark from an Italian Navy vessel in the harbor of Reggio Calabria, southern Italy, on Tuesday.

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