4 dead in migrant shipwreck off Libya, says Red Crescent

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Red Crescent workers tend to rescued migrants sitting at dock with thermal blankets, after two boats carrying migrants capsized off the Libyan coastal city of Al Khums causing multiple casualties, in a location given as Khums, Libya, November 15, 2025. (REUTERS)
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Migrants wait to be rescued by the Spanish NGO Open Arms lifeguards during a rescue operation at international waters zone of Libya SAR (Search and Rescue) in the Mediterranean sea, on Sept. 15, 2022. (AP file photo)
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Updated 16 November 2025
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4 dead in migrant shipwreck off Libya, says Red Crescent

  • Around 33,000 migrants have died or gone missing in the Mediterranean since 2014

TRIPOLI: Libya’s Red Crescent said it took part in a major rescue operation after two boats carrying close to 100 irregular migrants capsized off the country’s coast, leaving four dead.

The four dead were among 26 Bangladeshis traveling aboard one vessel, the organization said.
The second boat was carrying 69 migrants, two of them Egyptian and the rest Sudanese, eight of whom were children, the Red Crescent said, reporting no deaths among them.
The organization said it had received an alert overnight about two boats that had capsized in the Mediterranean. They had departed from the Libyan city of Khoms, 120km east of Tripoli. The Red Crescent said it had worked alongside the coast guard and port authorities.
Libya is a key transit country for thousands of migrants seeking to reach Europe by sea each year.
Earlier this week, the International Organization for Migration said the sinking of another ship that sailed from Libya had left 42 missing, presumed dead.
The UN High Commissioner for Refugees has recorded more than 1,700 people dead or missing this year on Mediterranean migration routes and off the coast of West Africa.
According to Missing Migrants, an IOM project, around 33,000 migrants have died or gone missing in the Mediterranean since 2014.
Elsewhere, reports said 19 boats carrying around 360 people reached Spain’s Balearic Islands recently, the latest surge in arrivals defying attempts by authorities to curb the fastest-growing migratory route into the EU.
Arrivals via the Western Mediterranean route — primarily boats departing Algeria for Spain — rose 27 percent in January-October compared with the same period last year, the steepest increase among routes, even as overall arrivals to the EU fell 22 percent, according to data from EU border agency Frontex.
Smugglers are using faster boats, with the Balearics their main destination, Frontex spokesperson Chris Borowski said.
Spain’s Interior Minister Fernando Grande-Marlaska last month met with Algerian President Abdelmadjid Tebboune who agreed to work on improving the deportation of irregular Algerian migrants in Spain and fight against smugglers.

Algeria has cut the number of deportations it accepts since 2022, a Spanish Interior Ministry spokesperson said.
The surge is causing concern in the Balearics, with regional leader Marga Prohens calling on the Spanish government to better “protect our borders.”
Irregular arrivals to the Balearics rose 66 percent year-to-date until October to 6,280 people, according to Spanish official data. Meanwhile, overall arrivals to Spain were down 36 percent year-on-year mainly due to decreasing flows to the Canary Islands, located off West Africa.
Data shows migrants from sub-Saharan Africa are increasingly opting to use the Western Mediterranean route. They now account for more than half of arrivals in the Balearics compared to a third last year, according to Spanish government representative in the archipelago, Alfonso Rodriguez.

 


Egyptian woman faces death threats for filming alleged harasser

Updated 13 February 2026
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Egyptian woman faces death threats for filming alleged harasser

  • Case revives longstanding national debate in Egypt over harassment and violence against women
  • A 2013 UN study found that 99.3 percent of Egyptian women reported experiencing harassment

CAIRO: A young Egyptian woman is facing death threats after posting a video showing the face of a man she says repeatedly harassed her, reviving debate over how victims are treated in the country.
Mariam Shawky, an actress in her twenties, filmed the man aboard a crowded Cairo bus earlier this week, accusing him of stalking and harassing her near her workplace on multiple occasions.
“This time, he followed me on the bus,” Shawky, who has been dubbed “the bus girl” by local media, said in a clip posted on TikTok.
“He kept harassing me,” added the woman, who did not respond to an AFP request for comment.
Hoping other passengers would intervene, Shawky instead found herself isolated. The video shows several men at the back of the bus staring at her coldly as she confronts her alleged harasser.
The man mocks her appearance, calls her “trash,” questions her clothing and moves toward her in what appears to be a threatening manner.
No one steps in to help. One male passenger, holding prayer beads, orders her to sit down and be quiet, while another gently restrains the man but does not defend Shawky.
Death threats
As the video spread across social media, the woman received a brief flurry of support, but it was quickly overwhelmed by a torrent of abuse.
Some high-profile public figures fueled the backlash.
Singer Hassan Shakosh suggested she had provoked the situation by wearing a piercing, saying it was “obvious what she was looking for.”
Online, the comments were more extreme. “I’ll be the first to kill you,” one user wrote. “If you were killed, no one would mourn you,” said another.
The case has revived a longstanding national debate in Egypt over harassment and violence against women.
A 2013 UN study found that 99.3 percent of Egyptian women reported experiencing harassment, with more than 80 percent saying they faced it regularly on public transport.
That same year, widespread protests against sexual violence rocked the Egyptian capital.
In 2014, a law criminalizing street harassment was passed. However, progress since then has been limited. Enforcement remains inconsistent and authorities have never released figures on the number of convictions.
Public concern spiked after previous high-profile incidents, including the 2022 killing of university student Nayera Ashraf, stabbed to death by a man whose advances she had rejected.
The perpetrator was executed, yet at the time “some asked for his release,” said prominent Egyptian feminist activist Nadeen Ashraf, whose social-media campaigning helped spark Egypt’s MeToo movement in 2020.
Denials
In the latest case, the authorities moved to act even though the bus company denied any incident had taken place in a statement later reissued by the Ministry of Transport.
The Interior Ministry said that the man seen in the video had been “identified and arrested” the day after the clip went viral.
Confronted with the footage, he denied both the harassment and ever having met the woman before, according to the ministry.
Local media reported he was later released on bail of 1,000 Egyptian pounds (around $20), before being detained again over a pre-existing loan case.
His lawyer has called for a psychiatric evaluation of Shawky, accusing her of damaging Egypt’s reputation.
These images tell “the whole world that there are harassers in Egypt and that Egyptian men encourage harassment, defend it and remain silent,” said lawyer Ali Fayez on Facebook.
Ashraf told AFP that the case revealed above all “a systemic and structural problem.”
She said such incidents were “never taken seriously” and that blame was almost always shifted onto women’s appearance.
“If the woman is veiled, they’ll say her clothes are tight. And if her hair is uncovered, they’ll look at her hair. And even if she wears a niqab, they’ll say she’s wearing makeup.”
“There will always be something.”