Greek coast guard boat was towing migrant vessel when it sank, eyewitnesses claim

The ship was carrying up to 750 people and was lost at sea without supplies of food and water when the Greek coastguard was called for help, reports say. (Hellenic Coast Guard via Reuters)
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Updated 01 July 2023
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Greek coast guard boat was towing migrant vessel when it sank, eyewitnesses claim

  • Newspaper investigation finds that survivors of the disaster off coast of Greece were ignored, had their statements altered by authorities
  • More than 600 people are feared to have lost their lives in the June 14 sinking; only 104 were rescued and more than 80 are confirmed dead

LONDON: A boat carrying as many as 750 migrants that sank in the Mediterranean off the coast of Greece was being towed by a Hellenic Coast Guard vessel at the time, survivors claim.

A joint investigation by collaborative journalism organization Lighthouse Reports, The Times, Der Spiegel and El Pais also uncovered allegations that survivors were prevented from talking to coast guard or police investigators, and that eyewitness testimonies were altered.

More than 600 people are feared to have died when the boat, which was traveling from Tobruk in Libya to Europe, sank near the town of Pylos on June 14. Only 104 people were rescued, and 80 have been confirmed dead.

Sixteen survivors said the boat was being towed by the coast guard when it sank, with some suggesting they were being taken toward Italy instead of Greece.

Nine of the witness statements from those 16 survivors, which were seen by journalists, had mentions of the coast guard vessel omitted when they handed over to the team carrying out the official investigation into the incident. Two migrants said the coast guard refused to record their statements.

In addition, after translation four other statements were found to contain identical passages that stated the vessel’s captain got lost and had been forced to call the coast guard for help.

One migrant, identified by the pseudonym Sami Al-Yafi, told journalists that Greek authorities edited his statement to remove any reference to the boat being towed by the coast guard. In his evidence, he said the vessel was picked up by the coast guard at 1 a.m., after it had been at sea for five days and had run out of fuel and water.

“The Greek ship sailed and immediately our boat waved (listed) to the left, then … waved to the right,” he said. “The migrants said, ‘Let’s go left to save the balance,’ but then unfortunately it capsized. I was under the boat and it was drowning me with it.

“When I was under the boat, I started to think how I’ll die, how I’ll suffocate, I won’t breathe anymore, how I would be food for the fish.”

Another migrant, Amjad Maher, a dentist from Homs in Syria, said the boat had started to skew from side to side because of the position of the tow rope the coast guard had attached to the vessel.

“I fell into the water and the boat created a huge wave which threw me about 30 meters away from the boat,” he said.

“When I fell into the water, I thought that it was my end, I would die here. I told myself that I made a mistake by risking myself in the sea.”

Al-Yafi said that when he was rescued, he tried to give evidence to the authorities about the coast guard vessel.

“They didn’t type that in my testimony. When they presented it at the end I couldn’t find this part,” he said.

The Hellenic Coast Guard did not respond to requests for comment by journalists.


Duterte drew up ‘death lists’, boasted about murders: ICC prosecutor

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Duterte drew up ‘death lists’, boasted about murders: ICC prosecutor

  • Former Philippines president Rodrigo Duterte personally drew up “death lists” and boasted about murders committed during his “war on drugs“
THE HAGUE: Former Philippines president Rodrigo Duterte personally drew up “death lists” and boasted about murders committed during his “war on drugs,” an International Criminal Court prosecutor alleged Tuesday at a crimes against humanity hearing.
On day two of proceedings against Duterte, ICC prosecutor Edward Jeremy laid out searing testimony including allegations that children had their heads wrapped in packing tape and strangled to death.
“As president, Duterte publicly named persons he alleged were involved in drugs, and many of those would end up as victims in his so-called war on drugs,” Jeremy said.
The “Duterte list” was “basically a death list,” Jeremy cited a witness as saying, showing a video of Duterte himself saying: “I am the sole person responsible for it all.”
Duterte faces three ICC counts of crimes against humanity, with prosecutors alleging his involvement in at least 76 murders between 2013 and 2018.
Prosecutors say this is a “mere fraction” of the thousands believed killed in his “war on drugs” as mayor of Davao City and then president.
“As witnesses stated, the poor were often targeted, because they were the ones least likely to file complaints against the police,” said Jeremy.
Jeremy played a clip of Duterte joking about “extrajudicial killings” during a speech.
“And in this opulent, gilded, presentation room, the officials laugh along with their president while he boasts about his skills in extrajudicial killing,” said Jeremy.
“And outside on the streets of the Philippines, the bodies pile up.”
Jeremy alleged that almost 1,500 people had already been killed at the time of this clip.
The week-long ICC proceedings are not a trial but a “confirmation of charges” hearing, enabling judges to weigh whether to move ahead with a trial.
Duterte, 80, is not in the courtroom after exercising his right not to appear.
His defense team says he is weak and in cognitive decline. The prosecution and victims counter that he is healthy but does not want to face loved-ones of victims.
The court passed him fit to attend but granted him his right to absence.
Once the hearings wrap up Friday, the court will take up to 60 days to decide whether to proceed to a full trial, usually by written judgment.
Duterte’s defense lawyer, Nicholas Kaufman, on Monday said his client “maintained his innocence absolutely.”
Kaufman argued that while Duterte used “bluster and hyperbole” in his speeches, he also frequently ordered authorities only to shoot in self-defense.