Two more child migrants drown off Greece amid angry protests

One of the children's bodies had been recovered, but the search for a six-year-old boy, was still under way


Afp November 05, 2015
A young migrant is covered with a blanket as migrants and and refugees wait to enter a registration camp near Gevgelija on October 30, 2015. PHOTO: AFP

ATHENS: Two children drowned overnight off the Greek island of Kos when a boat carrying migrants sank, officials said Thursday, as protests were held against rising migrant deaths.

The two children had boarded a dinghy in Turkey with their families to set sail for Kos, whose northern coast lies just 250 metres (820 feet) away, port police said.

One of the children's bodies has been recovered, but the search for the second victim, a six-year-old boy, is still under way.

His father, who was among 14 people rescued from the stricken vessel, had told rescuers that he had been unable to save his son from drowning and had to let his body go in order to help other passengers.

Eleven migrants, including six children, drown off Greece: coastguard

Europe is grappling with its biggest influx of migrants and refugees since World War II, many fleeing conflict and misery in Syria.

More than 700,000 people have made the perilous journey across the Mediterranean this year so far and some 3,440 people have died or gone missing trying to do so, according to UN figures.

Greek Prime Minister Alexis Tspiras Thursday paid a visit to one of the beaches on the island of Lesbos, which has become a prime gateway into Europe for the desperate refugees.

13 children among at least 22 migrants drowned off Greece: authorities

"A crime is committed in the Aegean (Sea) which must be stopped," Tsipras said afterwards, accompanied by European Parliament chief Martin Schulz.

Their visit was marked by protests against Europe's policies on refugees, with one group going into the town hall and hanging a banner, claiming "The Aegean is full of migrant corpses, Europeans murderers of peoples".

Other protestors, wearing orange life jackets symbolising the risky exodus towards Europe, gathered at the so-called hotspot at Moria where new arrivals are registered and was also visited by Tsipras and Schulz.

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