Last Updated: Friday, 19 May 2023, 07:24 GMT

Boat tragedy off Moroccan coast, 4 dead, several boats rescued off Maltese, Italian and Libyan coasts

Publisher UN High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR)
Publication Date 6 December 2011
Cite as UN High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR), Boat tragedy off Moroccan coast, 4 dead, several boats rescued off Maltese, Italian and Libyan coasts, 6 December 2011, available at: https://www.refworld.org/docid/4ee0743d5.html [accessed 20 May 2023]

UNHCR received news late last week of a rescue by the Moroccan Royal Navy of a vessel with more than 60 people. 53 people on board were rescued while four were found to have died. The boat was found a few kilometres offshore from Dar Kabdani in the north of the country. A number of people are known to have drowned and their bodies have not yet been recovered.

Among the passengers were children under the age of ten, and women, some pregnant. The dead included a Congolese woman and her daughter, who UNHCR identified at the morgue. They were both registered refugees. The passengers mentioned that a Congolese refugee, a young man, is known to have drowned. His body has not been recovered.

Separately, two sailing boats with around 80 people onboard and of different nationalities (mostly Afghans) departing from Greece, were rescued by the Italian coastguard on Monday after a week at sea. They were found dehydrated and with no food and water left.

UNHCR has also been informed that a boat that left from the Libyan coast over the weekend was rescued by the Maltese Armed Forces overnight. Fourty-four people were reported to be onboard. Many are Somali, according to a Somali journalist who contacted our office in Rome.

The Libyan coast guard has reported that up to four hundred people were rescued from boats off the Libyan coast in recent days. It now seems that migrants and refugees are once again attempting to use Libya as a transit route to Europe. In years gone past it was rare to see boats attempting to make the perilous crossing during the winter.

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