Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

16 migrants die as smuggler boat sinks in Aegean

- By Elena Becatoros and Demetris Nellas

ATHENS, Greece — A smuggling boat sank Saturday off a Greek island, killing at least 16 migrants including children, and a search-and-rescue operation was underway to find two others believed missing.

The wooden boat was believed to have been carrying around 21 people when it sank for reasons that were not immediatel­y clear off the coast of the eastern Aegean island of Agathonisi, the Greek coast guard said. Three people — two women and one man — managed to swim to the island and alert authoritie­s.

A massive search operation involving aircraft, the Greek navy and coast guard and a vessel from the European border agency Frontex was underway.

A coast guard spokeswoma­n said the recovered bodies had not been identified yet and they included six children.

Despite a two-year deal between the European Union and Turkey designed to stop migrants and refugees from pouring into Europe from the Turkish coast to nearby Greek islands, dozens and sometimes hundreds of people still make the journey each week. Most cross in rickety inflatable boats or other unseaworth­y vessels.

The U.N. Refugee Agency released a statement saying it is “deeply saddened” at the sinking.

“Some 4,000 people, mainly women and children from Syria, Iraq and Afghanista­n, have arrived by sea to Greece so far this year. Today’s tragic incident is the first shipwreck in the Aegean of 2018, but some 500 refugees and migrants lost their lives or went missing in the Greek Aegean Sea over the past two years,” it said.

The U.N. refugee agency said “renewed efforts are needed to combat smuggling and traffickin­g and to strengthen safe alternativ­es to the perilous sea journeys.”

Also Saturday, demonstrat­ors marched through central Athens protesting the EU-Turkey migrant deal, whose second anniversar­y falls Sunday.

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