More than 33,000 migrants have died at sea trying to reach European shores this century, making the Mediterranean “by far the world’s deadliest border”, the United Nations migration agency said yesterday.
After record arrivals from 2014 to 2016, the European Union’s deal with Turkey to stop arrivals from Greece, and robust patrols off Libya’s coast have greatly reduced the flow, the International Organisation for Migration (IOM) said.
Professor Philippe Fargues of the European University Institute in Florence, author of the report, said the figures probably underestimated the actual scale of the human tragedy.
“The report states that at least 33,761 migrants were reported to have died or gone missing in the Mediterranean between the year 2000 to 2017. This number is as of June 30,” IOM’s Jorge Galindo told a Geneva news briefing. “It concludes that Europe’s Mediterranean border is by far the world’s deadliest.”
So far this year some 161,000 migrants and refugees have arrived in Europe by sea, about 75% of them landing in Italy with the rest in Greece, Cyprus and Spain, according to IOM figures.
Nearly 3,000 others are dead or missing, it said.
“Shutting the shorter and less dangerous routes can open longer and more dangerous routes, thus increasing the likelihood of dying at sea,” Fargues said.
Meanwhile, Libya’s UN-backed government said on Thursday that it was investigating reports of Africans migrants being sold as slaves.
Footage broadcast by CNN appearing to show African migrants being traded in Libya sparked international outcry and protests in Europe and Africa.