Refugee Crisis Expands: Babies, Children Drown As Boat Capsizes Off Greece

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A Syrian father holding a baby in a lifetube swims towards the shore after their dinghy deflated some 100m away before reaching the Greek island of Lesbos. Photo: Reuters

The ongoing refugee crisis had another tragedy Sunday as a boat of 34 refugees (half of which were children and small babies) capsized off the coast of a Greek island.  Many of the refugees drowned in what the coastguard is saying is largest toll in those waters since the crisis started.

From The Sydney Morning Herald:

Four babies, six boys and five girls died when the wooden vessel carrying them overturned on Sunday morning, about   five kilometres east of the small island of Farmakonisi, close to Turkey’s coast. 

Tens of thousands of mainly Syrian refugees have braved rough seas this year to make the short but precarious journey from Turkey to Greece’s eastern islands, mainly in flimsy and overcrowded inflatable dinghies.

Thousands have died, many of them taking the much longer crossing from Libya, in Europe’s worst migrant crisis in decades.

Details of the nationalities and ages of the victims of Sunday’s sinking off Farmakonisi were not  yet available.

The coastguard said 68 people were rescued from the water and another 30 survivors from the same boat were found on Farmakonisi.

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A Syrian man swims in front of a dinghy full of refugees off the Greek island of Lesbos. Photo: Petros Giannakouris

On Lesbos, an island which has borne the brunt of Greece’s migrant intake, a Reuters photographer saw 10 dinghies arriving within 90 minutes on Sunday.

One inflatable carrying about 70 refugees, including many children, burst about 100 metres from the shore. Locals pulled infants and toddlers – including a two-month-old baby cradled by his father – ashore on rubber rings.

Greece has regularly called for more help from authorities in dealing with the influx, and caretaker Prime Minister Vasiliki Thanou urged the bloc on Sunday to agree on a more comprehensive policy.

A Syrian man swims in front of a dinghy full of refugees. Photo: Petros Giannakouris
A Syrian man swims in front of a dinghy full of refugees. Photo: Petros Giannakouris

Other countries were wrong to criticise Greece’s response to the flow of migrants, Mrs Thanou said during a trip to Lesbos.

“We would urge them to consider the responsibility of guarding a 16,000-kilometre-long coastline of European borders … and whether a future Europe of principles can be constructed by building walls,” she said.

 Most refugees reaching Greece quickly head north to other countries, with Germany the most favoured destination.

EU states have so far failed to reach agreement over proposals by commission president Jean-Claude Juncker to accept a mandatory quota system for  taking refugees.

 

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