60 migrants die in dinghy in Mediterranean, survivors say
Survivors report that at least 60 migrants perished following a distressing incident involving a rubber dinghy in the Mediterranean Sea. The Ocean Viking, a vessel operated by the humanitarian organization SOS Méditerranée, rescued 25 survivors.
These individuals recounted their journey, stating they embarked from Zawiya on the Libyan coast and encountered trouble when the dinghy’s engine malfunctioned after three days at sea, leaving them stranded without provisions.
Among the deceased were women and at least one child, believed to have succumbed to dehydration and starvation rather than drowning.
SOS Méditerranée reported that the Ocean Viking team sighted the dinghy, which set sail last Friday, via binoculars on Wednesday and coordinated a medical evacuation with Italian coast guards.
The survivors, described as being in a severely weakened state, are receiving medical attention, with two unconscious and critically ill individuals airlifted to Sicily for urgent care.
The remaining 23 survivors, along with over 200 other rescued migrants from two separate boats, remain aboard the Ocean Viking.
The vessel is heading for the port of Ancona, about four days away, but the team has requested a closer port of safety.
“The people who were on the boat in distress, lost at sea for almost a week, went out of water and food very quickly, according to the survivors,” said an SOS Méditerranée spokeswoman on board the ship.
“People died along the way. I met a man who lost his wife and one-and-a-half-year-old baby. The baby died the first day, the mother the fourth day. They were from Senegal and had been in Libya for more than two years.”
The EU’s border agency Frontex told the BBC that it raised the alarm last Friday after spotting a vessel with more than 50 people onboard near the coast of Libya. It did not specify if it was the same rubber dinghy picked up by the Ocean Viking.
Frontex says one of its aircraft out on a routine trip spotted the vessel within Libya’s rescue zone and so alerted the Libyan authorities.
The EU agency says it also issued a mayday alert to all other boats in the area to help the vessel – and contacted Italian and Maltese rescue coordination centres too.
Frontex says its aircraft needed to return to dry land to refuel and it didn’t know what happened to the vessel after the initial observation.
The International Organisation for Migration (IOM) said last week that 2023 was the deadliest year for migrants since records began a decade ago, with at least 8,565 people dying on migration routes worldwide.
The UN agency said the figure was 20% up on the year before.
Its report found that the Mediterranean crossing continued to be the most dangerous journey, with at least 3,129 deaths and disappearances during 2023 – the highest toll since 2017.
Julia Black, a IOM Project manager, told the BBC that “not as many people are crossing now but almost as many people are dying”.
“With the 300 deaths recorded this year so far that’s nearly the same as last year, so I am greatly concerned that we are going to see a record-breaking year in terms of the number of deaths in the Mediterranean.”
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May their souls rest in perfect peace. Amen