Forty migrants missing after raft sinks near Libya - Italy coast guard
Mon Sep 22, 2014 6:33pm GMT
ROME, Sept 22 (Reuters) - Forty migrants were missing after the raft that
carried them sank around 30 miles (48.28 kilometres)from eastern Libya, an
Italian coast guard official said on Sunday.
Italian authorities sent boats to the scene and 55 people have been rescued,
but survivors said there were around 95 people in total on the raft, the
official said.
The sinking will likely add to a death toll from such incidents in the
waters between Italy and North Africa which the International Organisation
for Migration (IOM) said last week had risen to nearly 3,000 since the
beginning of this year.
Droves of people, many fleeing war in Syria and military conscription in
Eritrea, have attempted the perilous passage this year, bringing the number
of people successfully arriving in Italy by sea to around 130,000 in 2014,
compared with 60,000 last year, according to the U.N. refugee agency.
A breakdown of order in Libya has made it almost impossible to police the
traffickers who pack people into rickety boats and charge them some $1,000
each for the passage.
Italy launched its "Mare Nostrum" or "Our Sea" search and rescue mission
last year after 366 people drowned in a shipwreck just a mile from the
southern Italian island of Lampedusa.
(Reporting by Isla Binnie, editing by William Hardy)