Rescuers continued the search Thursday for as many as 200
migrants feared drowned after a fishing boat capsized in the Mediterranean off
the coast of Libya.
So far, 373
migrants have been rescued and 25 bodies have been recovered since the boat
sank Wednesday, Cmdr. Filippo Marini of the Italian Coast Guard, which is
coordinating the rescue operation, told CNN.
Around 600
people are thought to have been on board the packed wooden vessel when it went
down.
Irish navy Cmdr.
Brian Fitzgerald told journalists Thursday that about 200 people are feared
dead. Three vessels operated by the medical aid group Doctors Without Borders
are aiding the continued search efforts.
"Yesterday
is heavy on our minds but the boats will not stop," the organization said
on Twitter on Thursday.
Rescuers don't know how many people might have been trapped in
the hull of the boat, Doctors Without Borders said.
An Irish naval
vessel was also involved in the rescue operation Wednesday off the Libyan
coast, taking on board 367 of the survivors, 12 women and 13 children among
them. They arrived in the Sicilian port city of Palermo on Thursday.
Irish Defense
Minister Simon Coveney said the 25 bodies recovered were also on board. They
include those of four children.
He warned
Wednesday evening that the death toll was likely to rise.
"Our
thoughts and prayers are with all those who have lost their lives, the
survivors and the rescuers for whom this is an extremely difficult
operation," Coveney said.
The ships were
sent to the scene after a distress call Wednesday morning from the fishing
boat, Marini said.
The boat crammed
with migrants capsized as soon as the Irish vessel arrived, he said, probably
because all those on board moved to one side at the same time. Rubber boats
were immediately put into the water to save people as the boat went down.
Rescuer:
'Horrific sight'
Doctors Without Borders said its ship
Dignity I had been called first to assist the fishing boat, then diverted to
another vessel in trouble -- from which it rescued 94 people -- before being
called back to help with the original boat.
"It was a
horrific sight, people desperately clinging to lifebelts, boats and anything
they could, fighting for their lives, amidst people drowning and those who had
already died," said Juan MatÃas, project coordinator for Doctors Without
Borders on the Dignity I.
"The fact
that we were first called to assist this boat and then shortly afterward sent
to another one highlights the severe lack of resources available for rescue
operations."
Among those
rescued was a 19-month-old Palestinian girl, along with her parents, Doctors
Without Borders said. She was pulled from under the water by her father.
The Dignity I
provided medical treatment to 10 people, the medical aid charity said, with
five in such a severe condition that they had to be evacuated by helicopter.
It called for the creation of safe and legal ways for people to
seek asylum or migrate to Europe, saying that was the only way to bring an end
to such tragedies.
Marini said
another 381 migrants had been rescued in a separate operation carried out by an
Italian Coast Guard vessel Thursday morning.
Risking death for a better life
The boats are just the latest vessels
overflowing with migrants seeking to reach European soil to get into trouble in
Mediterranean waters.
More than 2,000 migrants have now died this year as they tried to make the perilous
crossing, the International Organization for Migration said in a statement
Tuesday.
"As in
2014, the overwhelming majority died in the Channel of Sicily on the Central
Mediterranean route connecting Libya and Italy, where unseaworthy vessels used
by smugglers and traffickers significantly increase the likelihood of tragedies
occurring," the organization said.
At the same time,
thanks to international maritime efforts, some 188,000 migrants have been
rescued in the Mediterranean so far this year, it said.
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