Hundreds feared missing or dead trying to cross the Mediterranean, says UN migration agency

Members of the Italian Red Cross speak to each other outside the hotspot, a reception centre for migrants, in Lampedusa, Italy, August 15, 2025. (REUTERS)
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Updated 27 January 2026
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Hundreds feared missing or dead trying to cross the Mediterranean, says UN migration agency

  • Survivors from the same boat said another vessel departed simultaneously but ⁠never arrived and its fate remains unknown, the IOM said

GENEVA: Hundreds of people are feared dead or missing after attempting to cross the Mediterranean Sea, with reports of multiple shipwrecks ​in the last ten days following bad weather, the UN migration agency said on Monday.
“The final toll may be significantly higher, a stark reminder that this route remains the deadliest migration corridor in the world,” the IOM stated.
Three people — including twin girls about one year old — were confirmed ‌dead in ‌Lampedusa, Italy, after a search-and-rescue ‌operation ⁠for ​a boat ‌that left Sfax, Tunisia, the International Organization for Migration said in a statement. They died of hypothermia, according to their Guinean mother, a survivor. A man also died from the same cause, the IOM added.
Survivors from the same boat said another vessel departed simultaneously but ⁠never arrived and its fate remains unknown, the IOM said.
Over the ‌past 10 days — amid a ‍violent Mediterranean storm triggered ‍by Cyclone Harry — several boats are believed to ‍have gone missing, leaving hundreds unaccounted for, according to the IOM. Search efforts have been hampered by poor weather.
The agency is verifying a survivor’s report from another boat, ​rescued by a commercial vessel near Malta, of a shipwreck where at least 50 people ⁠could be missing or dead. Separately, 51 people are feared dead after a wreck off Tobruk, Libya, the IOM said.
“Smuggling migrants on unseaworthy and overcrowded boats is a criminal act,” the IOM said.
“Arranging departures while a severe storm was hitting the region makes this conduct even more reprehensible, as people were knowingly sent to sea under conditions amounting to a near-certain risk of death,” it added.
In 2025, at least ‌1,340 people died in the Central Mediterranean, according to the agency’s figures. 

 


Trump administration ends temporary protected status for Yemen

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Trump administration ends temporary protected status for Yemen

  • Decision ends humanitarian protections that grant deportation relief and work permits to more ‌than 1,000 Yemeni nationals
US President Donald Trump’s administration has ​ended temporary protected status for Yemen, Secretary of Homeland Security Kristi Noem said on Friday, the latest move targeting immigrants.
The decision to end humanitarian protections that grant deportation relief and work permits to more ‌than a ‌thousand Yemeni nationals was ​taken ‌after ⁠determining ​that it ⁠was against the US “national interest,” Noem said.
TPS provides relief to people already in the US if their home countries experience a natural disaster, armed conflict or other extraordinary ⁠event. The Trump administration has ‌sought to ‌end most enrollment in ​the program, saying ‌it runs counter to US interests.
“After ‌reviewing conditions in the country and consulting with appropriate US government agencies, I determined that Yemen no longer meets ‌the law’s requirements to be designated for Temporary Protected Status,” she ⁠said.
Around ⁠1,380 Yemeni nationals were covered by the temporary protected status as of March 31, 2025, according to the US Citizenship and Immigration Services. The status was last extended in 2024 and was set to expire on March 3 this year.