Deadly Journey Across The Mediterranean: Dozen Drown off Libya
The dangerous trip to Europe that has claimed over 60,000 people on the Mediterranean sea still does not scared a lot of people who seek to escape from poverty and conflicts in Africa and the Middle East by heading for Europe.
The migrants are feared to have drowned when their rickety boat sank off Libya's coast.
The Survivors told UN and aid agencies more than 120 people were on the boat when it started taking in water on Wednesday.
A number of people including women and children drowned in the chaos that followed. Nearly 90 migrants were rescued and later arrived in Italy.
All of the migrants are believed to have been from
Sub-Saharan Africa, including Senegal, Mali, Benin and Nigeria, Save the Children
spokeswoman Giovanna Di Benedetto told the BBC.
Separately, Federico Fossi, a spokesman for the UN refugee
agency, told AFP: "My colleagues are interviewing the survivors... who
arrived this afternoon in Augusta (Sicily), and they are talking of 35 to 40
people missing at sea."
The survivors were picked up hours later by a passing
merchant ship and brought to Sicily on an German military vessel operating in
the area.
This year has seen a series of migrant boat tragedies in the
Mediterranean - a shipwreck in April left nearly 800 people dead in the worst
single incident.
Photo Credit:Reuters/iMap
Culled from BBC
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