Miami Herald

Search for survivors ends in Haitian migrant boat capsizing near Puerto Rico

- BY SYRA ORTIZ-BLANES sortizblan­es@miamiheral­d.com Syra Ortiz Blanes: @syraob

After days searching more than 6,600 square miles of ocean, the U.S. Coast Guard stopped looking for possible survivors Sunday night after an overloaded boat carrying Haitian migrants overturned near Puerto Rico’s western coast last week.

“After the rescue that was carried out on the first day, none of the searches gave a sign of survival. There comes a time when evaluating all the informatio­n available, searches, unfortunat­ely, have to be suspended,” U.S. Coast Guard spokespers­on Ricardo Castrodad told the Miami Herald.

At least 11 people, all women, died, while 38 others were rescued from the water. Two passengers are from the neighborin­g Dominican Republic, while the rest are from Haiti.

The dead are also believed to be Haitian nationals, according to U.S. Customs and Border Protection spokesman Jeffrey Quiñones. He said that the boat came from the Dominican Republic and is estimated to have been carrying between 65 and 70 people before it overturned, based on what those aboard told authoritie­s. But the numbers could change as more informatio­n becomes available. Authoritie­s believe the boat was between 25 to 30 feet long.

“We understand that there were people who could not be rescued that we could not find,” said Castrodad.

On Monday afternoon, Customs and Border Patrol announced that Fermin Montilla, a 43-year-old man from the Dominican Republic identified as the captain of the capsized boat, had been charged with smuggling the Haitian migrants into the United States. He appeared before a federal judge on Friday and could face life in prison if found guilty.

A Customs aircraft noticed the capsized boat and dozens of people in the water late Thursday morning, about 11 miles from Desecheo, a national wildlife refuge in the Mona Passage, the treacherou­s stretch of water separating Puerto Rico and Hispaniola.

The U.S. Coast Guard, in collaborat­ion with Customs and Puerto Rico Police Department marine units, carried out 30 air-andwater searches over four days in an area of more than 6,600 square miles — larger than Puerto Rico itself. Conditions in the Mona Passage changed during the operation and the waves reached six to seven feet at some points,

Castrodad told the Herald.

Migrant trips across the Mona Passage are commonly conducted on socalled yolas, makeshift vessels often made of wood, nails and glue and sometimes fortified with fiberglass. Castrodad said that regardless of the size or materials of the boat, illegal voyages conducted on yolas are dangerous. Passengers often have to bail out water from the poorly constructe­d boats during the journey.

“It’s unsafe to cross the Mona Passage, it’s unsafe to transit 400 yards. All of these voyages, regardless of where they depart from, are dangerous to the point that they are a mass rescue case waiting to happen,” said Castrodad.

The U.S. Coast Guard will frequently find disabled, adrift yolas after their engines broke down, he said, adding that sometimes the people on the boat will call them asking to be retrieved.

“They thought that they would cross in 4-5 hours and they spend 2 or 3 days,” he said.

The commander of Coast Guard Sector San Juan, Capt. Gregory H. Magee, also warned about the dangers of the voyages in a press release Monday morning and asked people considerin­g going on these voyages to not do so.

“Unfortunat­ely, as the

threat of illegal voyages continues, we could be forced to respond to similar events in the future. The dangers of these voyages are real, we see them every day, people aboard grossly overloaded makeshift boats taking on water in high seas with little or no lifesaving equipment,” said Magee, “These people are at the mercy of ruthless smugglers who are not concerned with their lives or safety.”

The Coast Guard and Customs in Puerto Rico are handling an increase in illegal voyages across the Mona Passage and other areas of the Caribbean and the Atlantic Ocean, mostly filled with nationals from the Dominican Republic and Haiti.

On Monday, the Coast Guard repatriate­d 24 Dominican nationals — 19 men and 5 women — from a boat it intercepte­d last Wednesday night about 80 miles from the northweste­rn town of Aguadilla, after a Customs aircraft spotted the vessel. The agency has intercepte­d 61 illegal voyages since Oct. 1 in the Mona Passage and near Puerto Rico which were carrying 1,184 Dominicans and 348 Haitians, among other nationalit­ies.

Meanwhile, Customs in Puerto Rico had apprehende­d 757 Haitians and 292 Dominicans since Oct. 1. Haitians and Dominicans made up 86% of all migrants the agency detained during that time period.

“Our most heartfelt condolence­s to the families, friends, and loved ones of those who did not survive or remain missing” from the boat intercepte­d Thursday, Magee said. “Our prayers are with them.”

 ?? US Customs and Border Protection ?? A boat carrying undocument­ed immigrants near Puerto Rico overturned on May 12. At least 11 people, all women, died.
US Customs and Border Protection A boat carrying undocument­ed immigrants near Puerto Rico overturned on May 12. At least 11 people, all women, died.

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