The Mercury News

Syrians drown fleeing Turkey

Migrants making short crossing to coast of Greece

- By Mike Corder

BODRUM, Turkey — Six Syrian migrants, including an infant, drowned off the Turkish coast Tuesday as they tried to reach a Greek island, a rescuer said, underscori­ng the deadly risks taken by migrants making even short crossings to Europe in overcrowde­d smugglers’ boats.

Three more migrants survived for hours in the motorboat’s overturned hull, breathing air trapped in a pocket, before being rescued by divers, the emergency worker said.

Those who drowned were attempting perhaps the safest, shortest sea crossing in the risky journey to Europe, for the Greek island of Kos is only 2.5 miles from Turkey at its closest point.

Turkish coast guards unloaded fivebody bags at the harbor in the western tourist town of Bodrum as the rescued migrants, one man clutching his head in his hands, sat on the wharf.

A rescue team later found the drowned infant’s body, said a member of the Bodrum Sea Rescue Associatio­n, who spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized by coast guard officials to talk about the rescue.

The Turkish divers pulled a child and two men out alive from a sealed area of the capsized boat, a 30-foot motorboat, the rescue official said. Medical staff carried a wailing young boy, an oxygen mask around his neck, and a man to ambulances.

It wasn’t the only rescue Tuesday in the Aegean Sea.

About 20 other migrants were picked up by Turkish authoritie­s and taken to the nearby town of Turgutreis. It was not clear what boat they had been on.

The number of migrants attempting perilous sea crossings to Europe continues to climb despite the risks.

Greece’s coast guard rescued 576 migrants in 23 search-and-rescue operations off the islands of Lesbos, Chios, Samos, Agathonisi and Kos in the last 24 hours alone.

The U.N. refugee agency reported Tuesday that the number of refugees and migrants arriving in Greece by sea this year is now over 158,450, including over 50,000 people in July alone. That monthly number is greater than the 43,500 who arrived in Greece for all of 2014, it said.

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