At least 35 migrants dead after boat sinks off Tunisian coast

Nine refugees including six children die after speed boat sinks off coast of Turkey

The Turkish coast guard searches for survivors after a speed boat sank off the coast of Turkey. Photograph: Anadolu Agency
The Turkish coast guard searches for survivors after a speed boat sank off the coast of Turkey. Photograph: Anadolu Agency

At least 35 migrants were killed when their boat sank off Tunisia’s southern coast and 67 others were rescued by the coast guard, the defence ministry said on Sunday.

The rescue operation was ongoing, the ministry said in a statement. The migrants were of Tunisian and other nationalities.

Human traffickers increasingly use Tunisia as a launch pad for migrants heading to Europe as Libya’s coast guard, aided by armed groups, has tightened controls.

Security officials said the boat was packed with about 180 migrants, including 80 from other African countries.

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Unemployed Tunisians and other Africans often try to depart in makeshift boats from Tunisia to Sicily in Italy. Separately, nine people including six children died on Sunday after a speedboat carrying 15 refugees sank off the coast of Turkey’s southern province of Antalya, the Turkish coast guard said in a statement.

Meanwhile, nine people including six children died on Sunday when a speedboat carrying 15 refugees sank off the coast of Turkey’s southern province of Antalya, the Turkish coast guard said.

Six people were rescued by the coast guard and fishermen and were transferred to the hospital for treatment, the coast guard said in a statement. From January to May this year at least 26 migrants died trying to cross to Europe from Turkey, according to the coast guard statistics.

Fleeing conflict

More than a million migrants, many fleeing conflict and poverty in the Middle East and Africa, arrived in the European Union in 2015. Turkey was one of the main launch points for the dangerous sea leg of their journey, on which thousands died.

Numbers have declined sharply since Turkey and the EU made deal under under which Ankara, in exchange for €3 billion in financial aid and a promise to ease visa restrictions for Turks, began to exert more control on migrants trying to cross to Europe via its territory.

Overall Mediterranean arrivals to the European Union, including refugees making the longer and more perilous crossing from north Africa to Italy, stood at 172,301 in 2017, down from 362,753 in 2016 and 1,015,078 in 2015, according to UN data.

– Reuters