“You cannot carry out a violent diversion on such a vessel with so many people on board, without them wanting to, without any sort of cooperation,” said Nikos Alexiou, a spokesperson for Greece’s coastguard. Greek officials say they were faced with a dilemma on what to do with a vessel that had repeatedly declined offers of assistance, worried that even the slightest shift could unbalance the boat. Greek authorities had also established contact with the vessel.īut in repeated communication with the boat, from 1330 to 1800 GMT Greek authorities say people on the vessel told them they wanted to sail to Italy and wanted no assistance from Greece.Īerial photos of the vessel taken by the Greek coastguard hours before the tragedy unfolded showed a vessel crammed with people on its exposed decks. The person they communicated with said “they cannot survive the night.” MIXED MESSAGESĪdvocacy group Alarm Phone, which operates a trans-European network supporting rescue operations, said it received its first call from the boat just after 1200 GMT on June 13 to say the vessel was in distress. Passengers were also adamant about getting to Italy, which borders visa-free EU member states permitting safe passage, rather than Greece, circled by Balkan states that are taking an increasingly tough line on migration, they said. “If people reacted the traffickers would shout and threaten to stop giving them water,” one of the sources said, citing accounts of survivors. Over the next few days at sea the boat developed “two or three” mechanical faults, which were fixed by a crew of between 8-10 people. Traffickers had promised ample room on the vessel, but once passengers arrived at the scheduled departure point and saw it was overcrowded it was impossible to turn back, those sources said. They booked their voyage on social media, according to a maritime ministry official. Based on some accounts, there were about 20 women and children among the passengers. Passengers paid $4,500 for passage to Italy, the two Greek sources said. Two Greek sources familiar with police inquiries say that, based on accounts from about 30 survivors, the aging fishing vessel left Tobruk, in Libya, early on June 10. A migrant charity says a person they were in contact with on the boat said it was in distress, but Greek authorities say it repeatedly refused offers of help.įollowing are some details from the accounts say far: LEAVING LIBYA It capsized at around 2300 GMT that day.Įxactly what happened in the intervening 15 hours remains unclear. Authorities rescued 104 people but hundreds are feared missing, with some witnesses saying up to 750 people were aboard.Īccording to timelines from authorities and activists, the Greek coastguard was alerted to the presence of the vessel 47 nautical miles (87 km) south west of Greece at around 0800 GMT on June 13. KALAMATA, Greece, June 15 (Reuters) – As Greece confronts its worst sea disaster in years, questions are mounting about how potentially hundreds of migrants drowned even as their vessel was being shadowed by the Greek coastguard.Īt least 78 people died when the fishing vessel flipped and capsized in international waters south-west of Greece early on Wednesday. By Lefteris Papadimas and Karolina Tagaris
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |