At least seven children died when
boats carrying migrants sank off Greece on Wednesday, as rescue workers battled
to save more youngsters on the seashore in the latest desperate scenes in
Europe’s refugee crisis.
Three adults also died as four
vessels went down on the dangerous sea crossing from Turkey and more than 200
people, many suffering hypothermia, were rescued from one sinking off the north
coast of the Greek island of Lesbos.
Images from Lesbos, a major entry
point for the huge flow of migrants trying to get to Europe, showed doctors
attempting to revive unconscious children on the island’s shoreline.
Later in the evening, a drowned
woman and the bodies of two children were found floating off the Greek island
of Agathonisi, just a few kilometres from the Turkish coast. A one-year-old baby remained in a critical
condition Wednesday night, according to port police.Patrol vessels, fishing
boats and even locals on jet skis joined in efforts to search into the night
for more survivors in the water, struggling with strong winds.
Port police said it was not clear
how many people might be in the water, with survivors giving a confusing
picture of the number of people who were on the boat that capsized off Lesbos.
The new accidents brought to 39
the number of migrants found dead in Greek waters this month, according to an
AFP tally based on data from Greek port police.
“The priority for Europe must
remain the secure resettlement of refugees arriving from their countries of
origin,” said Greek shipping minister Thodoris Dritsas in a statement.
“As long as European nations feed
their national egos, smugglers will make enormous sums to the detriment of the
lives of refugees,” he added.
Amnesty International’s Deputy
Europe Director Gauri van Gulik said it was “obscene that European leaders
allowed such a chain of tragedies on its shores”.
Since the start of the year,
560,000 migrants and refugees have arrived in Greece by sea, out of over
700,000 who have reached Europe via the Mediterranean, according to the
International Organization for Migration (IOM).
More than 3,200 people have died
during these crossings, the IOM says, many of them children.
Also Wednesday, Europe’s maritime
anti-people-smuggling mission, Operation Sophia, rescued about 1,000 migrants
from six dinghies and a fishing boat off the Libyan coast, the Italian
coastguard said.
The rescues were carried out by
Italian, British, Slovenian and German vessels, it said.
Operation Sophia, coordinated by
Italy, was set up to arrest smugglers and seize their vessels in the
Mediterranean as Europe tries to stem the flow of migrants making the perilous
sea crossing.
All the rescued migrants are now
headed to Italy, the Italian coastguard said.
Source:
The Guardian
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