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Boat carrying 450 refugees overturns off port city of Rosetta
Rosetta: A boat carrying up to 450 refugees capsized in the Mediterranean off Egypt’s north coast on Wednesday, drowning 42 people and prompting a search operation that rescued 163 passengers, officials said.
The vessel overturned off the port city of Rosetta, police and health officials said.
Five survivors, handcuffed to beds in a Rosetta hospital room, told AFP up to 450 people were on board.
“The boat sunk. My three children died,” said Badr Abdul Hamid, 28, before breaking into tears.
“We were 450 people on board. We left at 2am. An hour an half later, it capsized. Whoever knew how to swim, swam. We even abandoned the women and children,” said Ahmad Mohammad, 27.
The boat sank some 12 kilometres from the coast and the victims included one child, 10 women and 31 young men, a municipal official in the Mediterranean city told AFP.
They were Egyptians, Eritreans, Sudanese and Syrians, said the official, Ali Abdul Sattar.
“I just wanted to reach Europe and live a decent life,” said Ahmad Gamal, 17.
The tragedy comes months after the EU’s border agency Frontex warned that growing numbers of refugees bound for Europe were turning to Egypt as a departure point for the perilous sea journey.
Smugglers often overload the boats, some of them scarcely seaworthy, with passengers who have paid for the journey.
Egypt’s Prime Minister Sharif Esmail ordered police to arrest the smugglers responsible, a cabinet statement said.
The military said in a statement that 163 passengers had been rescued so far, adding that they had stopped another boat elsewhere on the Mediterranean coast carrying 294 refugees.
With the search operating ongoing for an unknown number of people, health ministry spokesman Khaled Megahed told AFP that hospitals were being prepared to receive more casualties.
‘Egypt becoming departure country’
More than 10,000 people have died attempting to cross the Mediterranean for Europe since 2014, according to the United Nations.
Asylum-seekers have been seeking other ways to reach Europe since March, when Balkan countries closed the popular overland route and the EU agreed a deal with Turkey to halt departures.
“Egypt is starting to become a departure country,” Frontex chief Fabrice Leggeri said in an interview with the Funke group of German regional newspapers in June.
“The number of boat crossings from Egypt to Italy has reached 1,000 (so far) this year.”
More than 300,000 refugees have crossed the Mediterranean so far this year from various points of departure, the UN said this week.
The number is down from 520,000 in the first nine months of 2015.
Fatality rates rise
Despite the lower numbers attempting the dangerous sea crossing, fatality rates had risen, with 2016 on track to be “the deadliest year on record in the Mediterranean Sea,” said the UN refugee agency (UNHCR).
In June, a boat capsized near Sicily, drowning at least 169 refugees.
Earlier that month, a boat carrying hundreds of refugees sank off the Greek island of Crete and the bodies of 104 refugees washed up on a beach in Libya.
Different patterns have emerged in the two European countries, Greece and Italy, which receive the vast majority of refugees.
Arrivals in Italy this year stood at 130,411, on a par with the 132,000 people who landed over the same period in 2015, said the UNHCR.
But Greece has seen 165,750 refugees and refugees land on its shores this year, a 57 per cent drop against 2015 figures.
Arrivals began falling after the deal between the European Union and Turkey on curbing refugee flows across the Mediterranean.
The European Union launched “Operation Sophia” last year to destroy smuggler boats that could be used to ferry refugees across the sea.
An EU official told AFP this month that almost 300 smuggler boats had been put out of commission in the past year.
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