Hundreds feared dead after boat capsizes off Libya
Almost 400 migrants saved of an estimated 600 onboard fishing boat, with 25 bodies recovered so far, UN sources say.Human Rights
Hundreds feared dead after boat capsizes off Libya
Almost 400 migrants saved of an estimated 600 onboard fishing boat, with 25 bodies recovered so far, UN sources say.
Hundreds
of migrants trying to reach across the Mediterranean from Libya are
feared to have drowned after their fishing boat capsized off the North
African country.
Statements on Twitter by UNHCR officials suggest that 399 people have been rescued so far and another 25 confirmed dead out of an estimated 600 migrants on the boat.
Karl Stagno-Navarra, a journalist based in Valletta, Malta, told Al Jazeera that an Irish navy vessel confirmed that the boat capsized when the people on board rushed to one side when the LE Niamh got close to it.
"The Irish vessel LE Niamh was present in the area, as part of the EU-sponsored operations dealing with migration at sea," he said, adding that it approached the migrant boat after picking up a distress signal.
The Italian coastguard, a vessel of the Malta-based Migrant Offshore Aid Station and representatives of Doctors Without Borders (MSF) are also present at the scene participating in the operation, Stagno-Navarra said.
"There have tragically been many deaths, but [the MSF] does not have figures at this stage," MSF said on Twitter.
Stagno-Navarra said: "This is an extremely difficult operation as many migrants do not know how to swim and the conditions are reported to be windy and stormy."
The Mediterranean is the world's most deadly border area for migrants.
More than 2,000 migrants have died so far this year trying to cross the sea to reach Europe, confirming this as the deadliest route for migrants in search of a better life, the Switzerland-based International Organization for Migration (IOM) said on Tuesday.
It said in the same period last year, 1,607 migrants perished and a total of 3,279 lost their lives in the whole of 2014.
Approximately 188,000 migrants have been rescued in the Mediterranean so far this year, the IOM said, adding that the 200,000 mark is expected to be reached very soon.
RelatedStatements on Twitter by UNHCR officials suggest that 399 people have been rescued so far and another 25 confirmed dead out of an estimated 600 migrants on the boat.
Karl Stagno-Navarra, a journalist based in Valletta, Malta, told Al Jazeera that an Irish navy vessel confirmed that the boat capsized when the people on board rushed to one side when the LE Niamh got close to it.
"The Irish vessel LE Niamh was present in the area, as part of the EU-sponsored operations dealing with migration at sea," he said, adding that it approached the migrant boat after picking up a distress signal.
The Italian coastguard, a vessel of the Malta-based Migrant Offshore Aid Station and representatives of Doctors Without Borders (MSF) are also present at the scene participating in the operation, Stagno-Navarra said.
"There have tragically been many deaths, but [the MSF] does not have figures at this stage," MSF said on Twitter.
Stagno-Navarra said: "This is an extremely difficult operation as many migrants do not know how to swim and the conditions are reported to be windy and stormy."
The Mediterranean is the world's most deadly border area for migrants.
More than 2,000 migrants have died so far this year trying to cross the sea to reach Europe, confirming this as the deadliest route for migrants in search of a better life, the Switzerland-based International Organization for Migration (IOM) said on Tuesday.
It said in the same period last year, 1,607 migrants perished and a total of 3,279 lost their lives in the whole of 2014.
Approximately 188,000 migrants have been rescued in the Mediterranean so far this year, the IOM said, adding that the 200,000 mark is expected to be reached very soon.
Source: Al Jazeera
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