Greece pursues search after boat carrying Pakistani, Middle Eastern migrants sinks

Survivors of a shipwreck stand outside a warehouse at the port in Kalamata town, about 240 kilometers (150miles) southwest of Athens, Greece, Thursday, June 15, 2023. (AP)
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Updated 15 June 2023
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Greece pursues search after boat carrying Pakistani, Middle Eastern migrants sinks

  • Greek coast guard says survivors are mainly from Syria, Egypt, and Pakistan
  • So far, 78 bodies are recovered, amending toll of 79 deaths given Wednesday

KALAMATA: Greece on Thursday maintained a search for survivors a day after a fishing boat overloaded with migrants capsized and sank in the Ionian Sea, with the number of victims feared to reach into the hundreds.

The coast guard said 78 bodies had been recovered so far, amending a toll of 79 deaths given Wednesday.

A spokeswoman told AFP that two patrol boats, a helicopter, and six other ships in the area were searching the waters west of the Peloponnese peninsula, one of the deepest areas in the Mediterranean.

Greece has declared three days of mourning over the tragedy.

A Greek navy frigate bearing the bodies will dock at the western port of Kalamata later Thursday, the agency said.

So far 104 people have been rescued but there are fears that hundreds more are missing, based on testimony from the survivors and the fact that no women and children were among them.

“They are all men,” the coast guard spokeswoman said.

Government spokesman Ilias Siakantaris on Wednesday said there were unconfirmed reports that up to 750 people were on the boat.

“We do not know what was in the hold... but we know that several smugglers lock people up to maintain control,” he told state broadcaster ERT.

A survivor told hospital doctors in Kalamata that he had seen a hundred children in the boat’s hold, ERT said.

“The fishing boat was 25-30 meters long. Its deck was full of people, and we assume the interior was just as full,” coast guard spokesman Nikolaos Alexiou told ERT.

The coast guard said a surveillance plane with Europe’s Frontex agency had spotted the boat on Tuesday afternoon, but the passengers had “refused any help.”

It added that none on board were wearing life jackets.

Authorities said it appeared the migrants had departed from Libya and were heading for Italy.

The boat’s engine gave up shortly before 2300 GMT on Tuesday and the vessel capsized in the deepest waters of the Mediterranean, Siakantaris said, sinking in around 10 to 15 minutes.

The survivors are mainly from Syria, Egypt, and Pakistan, the coast guard said, and are temporarily housed in a port warehouse to be identified and interviewed by Greek authorities, who are looking for possible smugglers among them.

“It’s really horrific,” Erasmia Roumana, a member of the UNHCR refugee agency, told AFP at the port, adding that the survivors were “in a very bad psychological situation.”

“Many are under shock, they are so overwhelmed.”

“Many of them worry about the people they traveled with, families or friends. They want to call their families and tell them that they arrived,” she said.

The worst migrant tragedy in Greece was in June 2016, when at least 320 people were listed as dead or missing in a sinking near Crete, according to AFP records going back to 1993.


Rating firm S&P says it won’t rush Iran war downgrades, sees risks for countries like Pakistan

Updated 12 March 2026
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Rating firm S&P says it won’t rush Iran war downgrades, sees risks for countries like Pakistan

  • Agency says it is monitoring indebted energy importers as higher oil prices strain finances
  • Gulf economies seen better placed to weather shock, though Bahrain flagged as vulnerable

LONDON: S&P Global ‌said it would not make any knee-jerk sovereign rating cuts following the outbreak of war in the ​Middle East, but warned on Thursday that soaring oil and gas prices were putting a number of already cash-strapped countries at risk.

The firm’s top analysts said in a webinar that the conflict, which has involved US and Israeli strikes ‌against Iran and Iranian ‌strikes against Israel, ​US ‌bases ⁠and Gulf ​states, ⁠was now moving from a low- to moderate-risk scenario.

Most Gulf countries had enough fiscal buffers, however, to weather the crisis for a while, with more lowly rated Bahrain the only clear exception.

Qatar’s banking sector could ⁠also struggle if there were significant ‌deposit outflows in ‌reaction to the conflict, although there ​was no evidence ‌of such strains at the moment, they ‌said.

“We don’t want to jump the gun and just say things are bad,” S&P’s head global sovereign analyst, Roberto Sifon-Arevalo, said.

The longer the crisis ‌was prolonged, though, “the more difficult it is going to be,” he ⁠added.

Sifon-Arevalo ⁠said Asia was the second-most exposed region, due to many of its countries being significant Gulf oil and gas importers.

India, Thailand and Indonesia have relatively lower reserves of oil, while the region also had already heavily indebted countries such as Pakistan, Bangladesh and Sri Lanka whose finances would be further hurt by rising energy prices.

“We ​are closely monitoring ​these (countries) to see how the credit stories evolve,” Sifon-Arevalo said.