11 dead, 60 missing in shipwrecks in the Mediterranean
11 dead, 60 missing in shipwrecks in the Mediterranean/node/2532281/world
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)
11 dead, 60 missing in shipwrecks in the Mediterranean
Migrant refugees were from Syria, Egypt, Pakistan, Bangladesh, Iran and Iraq
Updated 18 June 2024
Arab News
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.
Pushed to margins, women vanish from Bangladesh’s political arena
Updated 3 sec ago
DHAKA: For more than three decades, Bangladesh was one of the few countries in the world to be led by women, yet there are almost none on the February 12 ballots. Despite helping to spearhead the uprising that led to this vote, women are poised to be largely excluded from the South Asian country’s political arena. Regardless of which parties win next week, the outcome will see Bangladesh governed almost exclusively by men. “I used to be proud that even though my country is not the most liberal, we still had two women figureheads at the top,” first-time voter Ariana Rahman, 20. told AFP. “Whoever won, the prime minister would be a woman.” Women make up less than four percent of the candidates for this election: just 76 among the 1,981 contestants vying for 300 parliamentary seats. And most of the parties put only men on their tickets. Women’s political representation has always been limited in the conservative South Asian nation. Since independence, the highest number elected was 22 in 2018. But from 1991 until the 2024 revolution, Bangladesh was helmed, represented abroad and politically defined by two women: Sheikh Hasina and Khaleda Zia. Zia died in December after leading the Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP) for four decades and serving three terms as premier. Hasina, the five-time prime minister overthrown in the July 2024 uprising, is hiding in India and sentenced to death in absentia for crimes against humanity.
- ‘Censored, vilified, judged’ -
Many rights campaigners had hoped the revolution that ended Hasina’s autocratic rule would usher in a period of greater equality, including for women. While the caretaker government of Nobel Peace Prize winner Muhammad Yunus set up a Women’s Affairs Reform Commission, his interim administration has also been criticized for sidelining the body and making unilateral decisions without consulting women officials. And there has been a surge of open support for Islamist groups, which want to limit women’s participation in public life. After years of being suppressed, emboldened hard-liners have demanded organizers of religious commemorations and other public events remove women from the line-up, as well as calling for restrictions on activities like women’s football matches. “Historically, women’s participation has always been low in our country, but there was an expectation for change after the uprising, which never happened,” said Mahrukh Mohiuddin, the spokesperson for women’s political rights organization Narir Rajnoitik Odhikar Forum (Women’s Political Rights Forum). An entrenched patriarchal mindset means women are often relegated to household duties, she added. Those who dare to speak out often face hostility. “Women are censored, vilified... judged for simply being part of a political party,” said uprising leader Umama Fatema. “That is the reality.” Even the group formed by student leaders of the revolution, the National Citizen Party (NCP), is fielding just two women among its 30 candidates. “I don’t take part in any decision?making of my party, (and) the biggest and most important decisions are not taken in our presence,” said NCP member Samantha Sharmeen. The NCP has allied with Jamaat-e-Islami, the largest Islamist party and one of 30 parties to have failed to nominate a single woman.
- ‘Can’t be any women leaders’ -
Jamaat’s assistant secretary general, Ahsanul Mahboob Zubair, said society was not yet “ready and safe” for women in politics. Nurunnesa Siddiqa of its women’s wing added: “In an Islamic organization, there can’t be any women leaders, we have accepted that.” One of the few women running in this election, Manisha Chakraborty, said women’s participation in Bangladesh’s politics has long been limited to tokenization. The nation of 170 million people directly elects 300 lawmakers to its parliament, while another 50 are selected on a separate women’s list. “The concept of reserved seats is insulting,” said Chakraborty, whose Bangladesh Socialist Party has nominated 10 women among it 29 candidates — the highest share in this poll. “Lobbying, internal preference, nepotism — all play a role in making women’s participation in parliament just a formality,” she told AFP. Former minister Abdul Moyeen Khan said the reserved seats “were meant to help women establish a foothold,” but “the opposite happened.” Selima Rahman, the only woman on the BNP’s standing committee, said promising women leaders often “fade away” due to a lack of party support. And while Zia and Hasina served important symbolic roles, she pointed to how both had been elevated to the pinnacle of power through family connections. Student voter Ariana Rahman fears a long struggle lies ahead. “More women in this election would have made me feel better represented,” she said. “The next few years are likely to be more hostile toward women.”