It was a
tragic start to New Year for migrants from Nigeria and other countries as
hundreds of them crossing to Italy and Spain were feared dead in the Mediterranean
Sea, the International Organisation for Migration, IOM, has said.
IOM’s Public
Information Officer in Libya, Christine Petré, reported that the boats carrying
the migrants departed from the coastal towns of Azzawiyah and Al Khums in
Libya.
“Most of the
survivors hail from African countries, including Senegal, Mali and Nigeria. The
Libyan Cost Guard reported that eight were from Bangladesh while two were from
Pakistan,” Petré said.
According to
IOM, and a report released by Libya’s Coast Guard, about 100 people on board
remain missing.
The UN
migration agency said its officials were present at the disembarkation point in
Tripoli and provided the survivors with food and water.
Othman
Belbeisi, Chief of IOM Libya Mission, said on Wednesday that about 200 migrants
or refugees had died or gone missing in the Mediterranean Sea with up to 100
unaccounted for since Saturday.
“It’s very
distressing that during the first 10 days of 2018 we have seen close to 800
migrants rescued or intercepted off the Libyan coast, with more lives lost at
sea.
“More has to
be done to reduce irregular unsafe movements of people along the Central
Mediterranean route,” Belbeisi said.
According to
him, the tragedy came at a time when Mediterranean migrants’ death dropped
sharply as IOM recorded only 26 on the Mediterranean Sea lanes in December
2017.
Mr. Belbeisi
said while January 2017 had witnessed some 254 deaths, this week’s reports
suggest that the start of 2018 may be even deadlier.
IOM reported
on Tuesday that 81 Mediterranean Sea deaths of migrants or refugees were
recorded in the first eight days of the year with five in Western Mediterranean
waters off Spain and Morocco and the rest between Italy and Libya.
In the
latest, and third deadliest, shipwreck in the Mediterranean since Saturday, the
Libyan Coast Guard rescued three rubber boats with 279 migrants made up of 19
women, 243 men, 13 boys and four girls, in an operation lasting at least 12
hours.
The UN
migration agency said it continued to provide support and direct humanitarian
assistance to the survivors of this latest tragedy, many of whom now are at
Libya’s Tajoura detention centre. (NAN)
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