Syrian girl dies in new migrant boat sinking off Greece

Several other refugees are believed to be missing


Afp September 19, 2015
PHOTO: AFP

ATHENS: A five-year-old Syrian girl was found dead on Saturday and several other refugees were believed to be missing when their boat sank in an attempted crossing from Turkey to Greece, the state ANA agency reported.

The Greek coastguard said it had rescued 11 people and was looking for other survivors. "We were told there were 26 people in the boat in total," a coastguard spokeswoman said. The survivors include another child and a man who was flown to hospital with hypothermia, she added.

The accident occurred east of the island of Lesbos, one of the Greek islands that have seen a heavy influx of refugees from war-torn Syria this year. Many have perished trying to cross the Aegean Sea in search of a better future in Europe.

Read: Barrel bomb kills 3 children in Syria's Aleppo: monitor

Earlier this month, harrowing pictures of three-year-old Syrian refugee Aylan Kurdi, whose body was found washed up on a Turkish beach after the boat carrying his family to the Greek island of Kos sank, caused an outpouring of emotion around the world, pressuring European leaders to step up their response to the refugee crisis.

The body of another four-year-old Syrian girl washed up on a beach in western Turkey on Friday. Migrants have in recent days turned to Turkey's land borders with Greece and Bulgaria to avoid the sea voyage that has cost over 2,600 people their lives in the Mediterranean this year.

Another boat was spotted by a helicopter from EU border agency Frontex sailing east of the Peloponnese peninsula with around 200 people of unknown nationality on board, the coastguard said. A coastguard helicopter airlifted to the city of Kalamata a man on board who required hospitalisation, it said.

Greece has seen over 300,000 refugees and migrants enter the country this year, most of them passing through to other European countries.

COMMENTS (1)

observer | 8 years ago | Reply As sad as this news is, most of these "refugees" risking their and their families' lives seem to be economic refugees. Otherwise, why aren't the going to fellow brotherly Muslim country Turkey which is less than an hour's drive?
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