World

Europe refugee crisis: Boat capsizes off Greece, leaving 8 dead, at least 34 missing

An extensive search was underway off a Greek island on Thursday for at least 34 people missing after their boat sank, in one of the largest maritime disasters since a massive refugee influx began this year.

Refugee crisis takes its toll in Greece

9 years ago
Duration 2:01
CBC's Margaret Evans reports on the continuing tragedy on the island of Lesvos

An extensive search was underway off a Greek island on Thursday for at least 34 people missing after their boat sank, in one of the largest maritime disasters since a massive refugee influx began this year.

Five children, two men and one woman were known to have drowned after the wooden boat, crammed with more than 280 people, sank north of the Greek island of Lesbos on Wednesday.

Some 242 people on board the wooden vessel were safely plucked out of the sea after it sank about three kilometres north of the island, the coast guard said.

At least 15 children between the ages of three months and ten years were taken to hospital with hypothermia, according to the UN refugees agency UNHCR.

More than 500,000 refugees and migrants have entered Greece through its outlying islands since January, travelling on to central and northern Europe in what has become the biggest humanitarian crisis on the continent in two decades.

Lesbos, which lies less than 10 km from the coast of Turkey, has been a primary gateway for thousands of migrants crossing the European Union's outermost border. There has been a surge recently as migrants attempt to beat bad weather for sea crossings.

Refugees report that smugglers now offer "discounts" of up to 50 percent on tickets costing from 1,100 to 1,400 euros ($1,600 to $2,036 Cdn) to make the journey on inflatable boats in bad weather, the UNHCR said.

Deck collapsed

Circumstances of the sinking of the vessel on Wednesday afternoon were unclear. Smugglers had to force passengers onto the boat at gunpoint because they were fearful about the seaworthiness of the vessel, Greek state television quoted witnesses as saying.

It sank when its upper deck crammed with people collapsed onto the lower desk, broadcaster ERT reported.

Quoting newly arrived refugees, UNHCR said smugglers based in Turkey were looking for larger boats like the one that sank on Wednesday. It was capable of carrying hundreds of people at a time at prices between 1,800 and 2,500 euros per passenger.

Desperate efforts

Elsewhere, another 123 people were rescued off the islands of Samos and in another incident off Lesbos. In total, 16 people drowned on Wednesday, including 11 children, the coast guard said. A baby has been missing for more than 12 hours.

Doctors and volunteers on Lesbos made desperate efforts to help a baby breathe, TV footage showed. Some of the survivors were sheltered in a chapel, a Reuters witness said.

The latest sinkings came just after EU leaders met on Sunday and agreed to boost co-operation and provide UN-aided housing for 100,000 people, half of them in Greece. The EU is expected to cover costs for accommodation for 20,000 in leased apartments in addition to temporary camps for 30,000 people.

But nations needed to stop fudging responsibility for the crisis, said German Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier.

"I am convinced that we won't get anywhere if we just point the finger at each other, if one considers that the responsibility lies with the other," Steinmeier, who was in Athens, said during a meeting with Greek President Prokopis Pavlopoulos.

"It's clear that Greece - which is trying to get back on its feet right now - is feeling this influx as a particular burden," he told a Greek newspaper. "We will really support Greece in dealing with these big challenges."