The Commercial Appeal

65 migrants killed in Italy shipwreck

- Paolo Santalucia and Luigi Navarra

CROTONE, Italy – Rescue teams pulled more bodies from the sea on Tuesday, bringing the death toll from Italy’s latest migration tragedy to 65, as prosecutor­s identified suspected smugglers who allegedly charged nearly $8,500 each for the “voyage of death” from Turkey to Italy.

Authoritie­s delayed a planned viewing of the coffins to allow more time for identifica­tion of the bodies, as more and more desperate relatives and friends arrived in the Calabrian city of Crotone in hopes of finding their loved ones, some of whom hailed from Afghanista­n.

“I am looking for my aunt and her three children,” said Aladdin Mohibzada, adding that he drove 25 hours from Germany to reach the makeshift morgue set up at a sports stadium. He said he had ascertaine­d that his aunt and two of the children died, but that a 5-year-old survived and was being housed in a center for children.

“We are looking into possibilit­ies to send them (the bodies) to Afghanista­n, the bodies that are here,” he told The Associated Press outside the morgue. But he complained about a lack of informatio­n as authoritie­s scrambled to cope with the disaster. “We are helpless here. We don’t know what we should do.”

At least 65 people, including 14 children, died when their overcrowde­d wooden boat slammed into the shoals about 100 yards off the shore of Cutro and broke apart early Sunday in rough seas. Eighty people survived, but dozens more are feared dead since survivors indicated the boat had carried about 170 people when it set off last week from Izmir, Turkey.

Aid groups at the scene have said many of the passengers hailed from Afghanista­n, including entire families, as well as from Pakistan, Syria and Iraq. Rescue teams pulled two bodies from the sea on Tuesday, bringing the toll to 65, police said.

Premier Giorgia Meloni sent a letter to European leaders demanding quick action to respond to the continent’s longstandi­ng migration problem, insisting that the only way to deal with it seriously and humanely is to stop migrants from risking their lives on dangerous sea crossings.

“The point is, the more people who set off, the more people risk dying,” she told RAI state television late Monday.

Crotone prosecutor Giuseppe Capoccia confirmed investigat­ors had identified three suspected smugglers, a Turk and two Pakistani nationals. A second Turk is believed to have escaped or died in the wreck.

Interior Minister Matteo Piantedosi pushed back strongly at suggestion­s that the rescue was delayed or affected by government policy discouragi­ng aid groups from staying at sea to rescue migrants.

The EU border agency Frontex has said its aircraft spotted the boat off Crotone at 10:26 p.m. Saturday and alerted Italian authoritie­s. Italy sent out two patrol vessels, but they had to turn back because of the poor weather.

Piantedosi recalled to Corriere that aid groups don’t normally operate in the area of Sunday’s shipwreck, which occurred off the Calabrian coast in the Ionian Sea. Rather, the aid groups tend to operate in the central Mediterran­ean, rescuing migrants who set off from Libya or Tunisia.

 ?? ALESSANDRO SERRANO/AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES ?? At least 65 people died when their boat wrecked off the shore of Cutro, Italy, early Sunday in rough seas.
ALESSANDRO SERRANO/AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES At least 65 people died when their boat wrecked off the shore of Cutro, Italy, early Sunday in rough seas.

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