At least 60 drowned in Mediterranean Sea after vessel capsizes

A dinghy
The group spotted the vessel through binoculars earlier this week
SOS Méditerranée
George Bunn

By George Bunn


Published: 14/03/2024

- 13:53

Updated: 14/03/2024

- 14:50

Survivors said they had set off from Zawiya on the Libyan coast but ran into difficulty

At least 60 people have drowned on a vessel carrying migrants across the Mediterranean Sea.

It is believed that the vessel was travelling from Libya to Italy or Malta.


The 25 survivors were picked up by the Ocean Viking, a vessel operated by the humanitarian group SOS Méditerranée.

They told their rescuers that they had set off from Zawiya on the Libyan coast seven days before being rescued.

Migrants in a ship

The survivors departed from Zawiya, Libya, 7 days before they were rescued

SOS Méditerranée

A spokesperson from SOS Méditerranée said: "The survivors departed from Zawiya, Libya, seven days before they were rescued.

"Their engine broke after three days, leaving their boat lost (and) adrift without water and food for days. Survivors report that at least 60 people perished on the way, including women and at least one child."

The United Nations migration agency (IOM) said it was "deeply troubled" by the report. A spokesperson said: "Urgent action is needed to strengthen maritime patrols and prevent further tragedies."

The SOS Méditerranée said its Ocean Viking vessel had evacuated 25 people who were spotted using binoculars who were on a rubber boat drifting in the Libyan search and rescue area.

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Mediterranean migrants

Governments are trying to curb the number of sea migrants making the crossing across the Med (File Pic)

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Italy and other European Union governments are trying to curb the number of sea migrants making the crossing from North Africa.

Various European governments have offered money or equipment to Libya and Tunisia to stop departures from their shores.

Data from the Italian Interior Ministry record that 5,968 migrants have arrived by sea so far this year, down from 19,937 at the same stage in 2023.

The Greek islands of Crete and Gavdos have seen a steep rise in migrant boats landing on their shores from Libya.

More than 1,075 migrants, mostly from Egypt, Bangladesh and Pakistan, have arrived on the islands this year, up from 860 in the whole of 2023, according to the UN refugee agency UNHCR.

Greece has been a favoured gateway to the European Union for migrants and refugees from the Middle East, Africa and Asia since 2015 when nearly one million people landed on its islands, causing an unprecedented humanitarian crisis.

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