Sea of death claims at least 1,500 lives
These immigrants were lucky to be rescued and taken ashore by the army last year. Photo: Darrin Zammit Lupi
The Mediterranean Sea may allure tourists but it also harbours a sinister side, with the UN refugee agency estimating that more than 1,500 migrants drowned or went missing last year trying to reach Europe.
According to the agency, 2011 was the deadliest year for the Mediterranean region since it started to record these statistics six years ago.
The statistics released by the UN High Commissioner for Refugees cover a tumultuous year for the Mediterranean region that witnessed uprisings in Tunisia, Egypt and a deadly conflict in Libya.
The previous high was in 2007 when 630 people were reported dead or missing.
The agency said that last year more than 58,000 people reached Europe via the Mediterranean, making it a record year for arrivals.
Four years ago 54,000 people made it to Greece, Italy and Malta but the numbers dropped significantly during 2009 and 2010 following stricter border control measures that included a deal between Italy and Libya to push-back migrants.
However, the frequency of boat arrivals increased in early 2011 as the regimes in Tunisia and Libya collapsed.
But the number of deaths may actually be higher, the UNHCR said, with estimates based on interviews with people who reached Europe on boats, telephone calls and e-mails from relatives, as well as reports from Libya and Tunisia from survivors whose boats either sank or were in distress in the early stages of the journey.
“Survivors told UNHCR staff harrowing stories of being forced on board by armed guards, particularly during April and May in Libya,” the UNHCR said.
Journeys took place on unseaworthy vessels with refugee and migrant passengers often forced into skippering the boats themselves, the agency added.
Some survivors even told the UNHCR that fellow passengers beat and tortured them and judicial investigations are ongoing in Italy following these reports.
The figures show the majority of last year’s arrivals by sea landed in Italy (56,000, of whom 28,000 were Tunisian), whileMalta and Greece received 1,574 and 1,030 respectively. Most of those who arrived were migrants not asylum seekers.
Only three boats landed between mid-August and the end of the year but the UNHCR said it was “disturbed” by the fact that in the first weeks of 2012, despite high seas and poor weather conditions, three boats have embarked on the perilousjourney from Libya.
One of the boats, carrying at least 55 people, went missing at sea after raisingthe alarm on January 14, warning ofengine failure.
The UNHCR said the Libyan coastguards informed it that 15 dead bodies, all identified as Somali, were found washed up on the beaches last week. They included 12 women, two men and a baby girl,while three more bodies were recoveredon Sunday.
The UNHCR has confirmed that all those who died were Somali residents of the makeshift site in Tripoli known as theRailway Project.
The other two boats made it to Malta and Italy after being rescued. The first rescue by the Italian coast guard of 72 Somalis, including a pregnant woman and 29 children, took place on January 13.
The second boat was rescued bythe Armed Forces of Malta two days later with the support of the US Navy and acommercial vessel.
The dinghy with 68 people on board, including a mother who had just given birth, was found drifting some 56 nautical miles from Malta.
“UNHCR welcomes the ongoing efforts of the Italian, Maltese and Libyan authorities to rescue boats in distress in the Mediterranean,” the agency said, renewing a call to all shipmasters in the Mediterranean to remain vigilant and carry out their duty of rescuing vessels in distress.
3 Comments
Post comment
Please sign in or create your Account to post comments.
Joe Xuereb
Feb 1st, 19:37
Once, a long, long time ago when the world population was very small, people in small groups were nomadic. They could roam wherever they wanted as there was nothing to stop them. They had to negotiate with anybody they met to forage and have access to water. There was no money and people bought stuff by bartering. As these groups got larger in number, people with their chief became more protective of their patch of land. And eventually, the groups became so large that formal frontiers were created and for perfectly understandable reasons. It would be nice to be able to roam wherever one fancied but, especially in this day and age, this would not be practical. What with terrorism, piracy on the high seas that is still practised in you know where, banditry (i.e. mugging) even in the most civilised countries, and so on. So frontiers are necessary and on the whole, they work. That is, until the 'one can take the African - or whoever - out of Africa, but one cannot take the Africa out of the African' brigade, in their hundreds of thousands get it into their head and decide, bugger the frontiers, I am going! Of course he does not say/think this in English, Italian, Maltese or whatever. He only speaks a language that nobody other than himself and his group understands. And the expectation is for a better life and the intention to work. Yes, and pigs might fly.
It's a difficult situation that has landed on our lap. On the one hand are genuine refugees who need and get our help, as much as we can because there is a limit(the Halcyon days of feeding thousands on five fishes and two loaves - or was it two loaves and five fishes? - are long gone, if they ever came. Now I have no problem with people who choose to believe the veracity of this heavenly bounty as long as they also realise that a constant influx of alien people will affect them and all that their country stands for. And if they suddenly wake up and realise that they cannot accommodate migrants/refugees in their own household, they should also wake up to the fact that moving people to Sweden, Denmark, etc. will prove to be a temporary easing to Maltas problem. but certainly not long term solution. What with Europe being so small compared to the vast continents, an overpopulated Europe and in deep recession, and diving, to boot.
Louise Vella
Feb 1st, 09:13
UNHCR should do its duty and hold an information campaign among the sub-Saharan Africans in Libya. UNHCR should warn them of the dangers of attempting an illegal sea crossing to the shores of Southern Europe. By so doing they put their own lives in danger. UNHCR should do everything in its power to avoid giving the impression that it encourages these illegal sea crossings which so often lead in the loss of many lives - especially since, as it says, the illegal travellers are migrants and not refugees.
Norman E Grech
Feb 1st, 10:21
Well said!
It is of great disappointment and sadness to anyone made of flesh to hear about this loss. Everything should be done to discourage this crossing to Europe! These people should not only be made aware of the dangers involved but also should be taught that it is WRONG to enter into any other country illegally, to impose their problems on others.
Hopefully this will serve as a deterrent to others. Ideally these people should stay in their countries and together with their follow countrymen, address, solve and improve their lives in the country where they were born.
This continuous influx of people in Europe is creating a lot of pressure and a lot of problems some of which will fiercely surface in the future!