11 dead, 60 missing in shipwrecks in the Mediterranean

This photo taken and handout on June 17, 2024 by the Guarda Costiera, the Italian Coast Guards, shows a sailboat off the coast of Calabria. According to Coast Guards 12 people from the sailboat adrift near the dividing line between Italian and Greek waters have been rescued. (AFP/Guardia Costiera/Handout)
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Updated 18 June 2024
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11 dead, 60 missing in shipwrecks in the Mediterranean

  • Migrant refugees were from Syria, Egypt, Pakistan, Bangladesh, Iran and Iraq

JEDDAH: At least 11 migrants died and more than 60 were still missing on Monday after two shipwrecks in the Mediterranean off the coast of southern Italy.

The German aid group RESQSHIP, which operates the Nadir rescue ship, picked up 51 people from a sinking wooden boat, including two who were unconscious, and found 10 bodies trapped in the lower deck of the vessel.
“Our thoughts are with their families. We are angry and sad,” the group said.
The survivors were handed over to the Italian coast guard and taken ashore on Monday morning, while the Nadir made its way to the island of Lampedusa towing the wooden boat with the bodies of the deceased.
UN agencies said the migrants came from Syria, Egypt, Pakistan and Bangladesh.

The second shipwreck took place about 200 km east of the Italian region of Calabria, when a boat that had set off from Turkiye eight days earlier carrying migrants from Iran, Syria and Iraq caught fire and overturned. One woman died, 11 people were rescued and taken ashore to the Calabrian town of Roccella Ionica by the Italian coast guard, and 64 migrants were missing at sea.

UN agencies urged EU governments to step up Mediterranean search and rescue efforts and expand legal and safe migration channels, so that migrants “are not forced to risk their lives at sea.”
More than 23,500 migrants, including 749 so far this year, have died or gone missing in the central Mediterranean since 2014.


Myanmar citizens head to early polls in Bangkok

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Myanmar citizens head to early polls in Bangkok

BANGKOK: A few dozen early voters in Myanmar’s widely criticized elections cast their ballots at the country’s embassy in Bangkok on Saturday as polls opened for citizens abroad.
Myanmar’s junta snatched power in a 2021 coup which plunged the country into a many-sided civil war, but it promises that polls will move the country toward peace and democracy.
The phased election is slated to begin in certain parts of the country in late December, but early voting abroad has begun at a few Myanmar embassies, including in Hong Kong, Singapore, Chiang Mai and Bangkok.
There was a heavy police presence on Saturday morning at the Bangkok embassy, where AFP journalists saw around 25 people sign up in the first two hours of polling.
Several voters declined to offer comment.
There are around half a million documented Myanmar nationals in the capital, according to Thailand’s labor ministry.
The International Organization for Migration estimates there are 4.1 million Myanmar nationals residing in Thailand, many of whom have fled the war and are undocumented.
Officials at the embassy told AFP they did not know how many people had filled the required voting registration form, which had an October 15 deadline.
Deposed lawmakers excluded from the vote, human rights monitors and rebel groups opposing the junta have dismissed the election as a charade to disguise continuing military rule.
The military government introduced broad new legislation ahead of the polls, including clauses punishing protesting or criticizing the election with up to a decade in prison.