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Home > News > World News > Article > 41 migrants dead as ship capsizes off Tunisia coast

41 migrants dead as ship capsizes off Tunisia coast

Updated on: 10 August,2023 07:56 AM IST  |  Rome
Agencies |

Four survivors were spotted by a plane before being rescued by a Maltese-flagged commercial tanker and transferred to an Italian coast guard vessel

41 migrants dead as ship capsizes off Tunisia coast

This year, there have been numerous shipwrecks of smugglers’ boats bound for Italy. Pic/AP

Forty-one people are believed dead after a migrant boat capsized off Tunisia, Italian state RAI television reported, citing four survivors who were rescued and brought to land Wednesday.


According to RAI and ANSA news agency, the four were first rescued by the Maltese-flagged bulk carrier Rimona in the Straits of Sicily. They were then transferred to the Italian coast guard, which brought them to the Sicilian island of Lampedusa.



The island, which is closer to Africa than the Italian mainland, is a frequent destination for migrant smugglers and has seen its migrant holding center repeatedly overcrowded with new arrivals this summer.


Alessandra Filograno, a spokeswoman for the Italian Red Cross, confirmed four survivors—two men, a woman and an unaccompanied minor—arrived at the Lampedusa center on Wednesday morning. Filograno had no further information.

Neither ANSA nor RAI provided attribution for the information but reported the four survivors—who hailed from Ivory Coast and Guinea—as saying that 41 people died, including three children.

This summer, there have been numerous shipwrecks of smugglers’ boats leaving from Tunisia bound for Italy. According to the Interior Ministry, more than 93,000 migrants have arrived in Italy so far this year, which is more than twice the 45,000 who arrived during the same period in 2022. Most of them are from Guinea, Ivory Coast, Egypt and Tunisia.

Italian Premier Giorgia Meloni, whose right-wing government includes the anti-migrant League party, has galvanised the European Union to join it in efforts to coax Tunisia to crack down on smuggling operations, but the boats continue to set off.

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