BFF-29 60 migrants drown off Tunisia: Red Crescent

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EUROPE-MIGRANTS-TUNISIA-LIBYA

60 migrants drown off Tunisia: Red Crescent

TUNIS, May 11, 2019 (BSS/AFP) – Around 60 migrants most of them from
Bangladesh have died after their boat capsized in the Mediterranean Sea after
it left Libya for Italy, the Tunisian Red Crescent said Saturday.

Survivors told the Red Crescent the tragedy unfolded after some 75 people
who had left Zuwara on the northwestern Libyan coast late Thursday on a large
boat were transferred to a smaller one that sank off Tunisia.

“The migrants were transferred into a smaller inflatable boat which was
overloaded, and 10 minutes later it sank,” Mongi Slim, a Red Crescent
official in the southern Tunisian town of Zarzis, told AFP.

Tunisian fishermen rescued 16 people and brought them to shore in Zarzis.

The survivors said they spent eight hours trapped in the cold sea before
they were spotted by the fishermen who alerted the Tunisian coastguard, Slim
said.

The bodies of three people were plucked out of the waters on Friday, the
Tunisian defence ministry said.

Survivors said the boat was heading to Italy and had on board only men, 51
from Bangladesh, as well as three Egyptians, several Moroccans, Chadians and
other Africans.

Fourteen Bangladeshi nationals, including a minor, were among the
survivors, said the Red Crescent.

“If the Tunisian fishermen hadn’t seen them (migrants), there wouldn’t have
been any survivors and we would have never known about this” boat sinking,
said Slim.

Charity ships have plied the Mediterranean Sea to rescue migrants in large
numbers but the number of rescue operations have dwindled as these vessels
have come under fire, namely from the populist Italian government, over their
action.

Italy’s far-right Interior Minister Matteo Salvini has imposed a “closed
ports” policy, refusing to allow migrants rescued at sea to enter his
country.

On Friday, however, more than 60 migrants disembarked in Italy after two
boats which had left Libya faced difficulties at sea and needed assistance.

The UN agency for refugees UNHCR called for stepped up search and rescue
operations to avoid future tragedies in the Mediterranean, which it calls the
“world’s deadliest sea crossing”.

“Across the region we need to strengthen the capacity of search and rescue
operations,” said Vincent Cochetel, the agency’s special envoy for the
Mediterranean.

“If we don’t act now, we’re almost certain to see more tragic events in the
coming weeks and months,” he warned.

According to the UNHCR, the journey across the Mediterranean “is becoming
increasingly fatal for those who risk it”.

“In the first four months of this year, one person has died (crossing the
Mediterranean) for every three that have reached European shores, after
departing from Libya,” it said.

Libya, which has been wracked by chaos since the 2011 uprising that killed
veteran dictator Moamer Kadhafi, has long been a major transit route for
migrants desperate to reach Europe.

BSS/AFP/SSS/1650 hrs