16 Jun 2023

Greece boat disaster: Capsized boat had 100 children in hold, BBC told

8:23 am on 16 June 2023
At least 79 people died and more than 100 were rescued after their fishing vessel capsized off the coast of southern Greece.

The Greek coastguard released images of the crowded boat before it went down. Photo: Supplied / Hellenic Coast Guard

By Nick Beake in Kalamata & George Wright in London

Survivors from a fishing boat that sank off southern Greece in one of Europe's worst migrant disasters say up to 100 children may have been on board.

At least 78 people have already been confirmed dead in the disaster.

But many more could still be missing at sea, with reports suggesting that up to 750 people were aboard the vessel.

Nine people, including several Egyptians, have been arrested on suspicion of people trafficking, Greek TV is reporting.

The coastguard has been criticised for not intervening earlier but authorities say their offers of aid were refused.

Rescuers are still searching the area where the boat capsized almost 50 nautical miles off the south-west coast, as hopes of finding more survivors dwindle.

The boat had departed empty from Egypt and stopped at the Libyan port of Tobruk where it picked up migrants destined for Italy, Greek media reports.

Images showed the decks packed with people, but accounts of a large number of women and children in the hold of the ship have come from medics who treated the mostly male survivors.

Survivors of a shipwreck sit inside a warehouse at the port in Kalamata town, on June 15, 2023, after a boat carrying migrants sank in international waters in the Ionian Sea. Greece has declared three days of mourning, the interim prime minister's office said on June 14, 2023, over a migrant boat sinking in the Ionian Sea feared to have claimed hundreds of lives. The Greek coastguard has so far recovered 79 bodies and rescued over 100, but survivors are claiming that up to 750 people were on board. (Photo by Angelos TZORTZINIS / POOL / AFP)

Survivors of a shipwreck sit inside a warehouse at the port in Kalamata town, on 15 June, after a boat carrying migrants sank in international waters in the Ionian Sea. Photo: AFP / Angelos Tzortzinis

A senior doctor at Kalamata General Hospital told the BBC as many as 100 children were on the vessel.

"[The survivors] told us there were children in the bottom of the ship. Children and women," said Dr Manolis Makaris, head of cardiology.

He said two patients had given him estimated figures.

"One told me about 100 children, the other about 50, so I don't know the truth - but it is many," he added.

Dr Makaris said he believed as many as 600 people could have died in the disaster.

"The exact number of all the people who were on the boat was 750. This is the exact number that everyone told me about this," he said.

Families of some Egyptian children who were missing had sent him photographs of their young relatives, he said, in the hope he would recognise them after treating them.

"It was a tragedy," he said. "Everyone in Europe must not accept this situation. We have to do something. Everyone has to do something so it doesn't happen again."

A reporter from Greece's ANT1 channel asked a survivor if there were 100 children on board, to which the survivor replied: "Yes."

The BBC has not been able to independently verify the figure, but it was corroborate by the charity Save the Children, citing testimonies from survivors.

Greek government spokesman Ilias Siakantaris said it was not known how many people were in the hold: "But we know that several smugglers lock people up to maintain control."

Families of some of the missing have arrived in Kalamata in search of their loved ones.

"My relatives were on the boat," said Aftab, who had travelled from the UK and said at least four of his relatives from Pakistan were unaccounted for.

"We've had confirmation. We found one of the relatives in [the rescue centre]. But the others we haven't got hold of yet," he told the BBC.

A Syrian man from the Netherlands broke down as he revealed his wife and brother-in-law were missing.

"The authorities are looking for their bodies in the sea... They're looking in hospitals, they're looking among dead bodies, and among the survivors," Kassam Abozeed said.

Activist Nawal Soufi was the first to raise the alarm after being contacted by people on the boat on Tuesday morning.

The coastguard said initial contact was made with the fishing boat at 14:00 local time on Tuesday, and no request for help had been made.

Timeline of events (all times in GMT - New Zealand is GMT +12)

  • 08:00 Greek coast guard says they are informed about a migrant boat by Italian authorities
  • 11:00 Coast guard says it makes contact with boat - it does not request help
  • 12:17-15:34 Multiple distress calls from boat according to Alarm Phone charity
  • 15:00 First commercial vessel supplies food and water
  • 19:40-22:40 Greek coastguard vessel sailed near the migrant boat, observing at a distance not finding any problem in its navigation
  • 22:40 Report of engine failure
  • 23:04 Migrant boat overturns and sinks
  • 04:00 Vessels help in rescue efforts

It said the Greek shipping ministry had made repeated contact with the boat and was told it simply wanted to sail on to Italy.

Two commercial ships provided water during the evening. In a Facebook post, Soufi said the situation became "complicated" when a ship approached the vessel and tied ropes to it while throwing bottles of water on board.

She said some of the people on board had felt in "extreme danger" due to fears the rope could cause the boat to flip, and that fights on board over water could result in it capsizing. The boat then moved away.

The coastguard said that in the early hours of Wednesday the boat's engine broke down and that people on board started to move around causing it to capsize. All of the 104 people rescued were male.

Alarm Phone, an emergency helpline for migrants in trouble at sea, complained that the coastguard had been "aware of the ship being in distress for hours before any help was sent", adding that authorities "had been informed by different sources" that the boat was in trouble.

However, coastguard spokesperson Nikos Alexiou said they tried to convince the vessel to get help and "stayed by if they needed us to save people".

Alexis Tsipras leader of leftist Syriza party speaks to the media after his visits to the survivors of a shipwreck at a warehouse at the port in Kalamata town on June 15, 2023, after a boat carrying migrants sank in international waters in the Ionian Sea. Greece has declared three days of mourning, the interim prime minister's office said on June 14, 2023, over a migrant boat sinking in the Ionian Sea feared to have claimed hundreds of lives. The Greek coastguard has so far recovered 79 bodies and rescued over 100, but survivors are claiming that up to 750 people were on board. (Photo by Angelos TZORTZINIS / AFP)

Former Greek prime minister Alexis Tsipras visited Kalamata on Thursday and spoke to survivors. Photo: AFP / Angelos Tzortzinis

Former Greek prime minister Alexis Tsipras visited Kalamata on Thursday and spoke to survivors about what they thought had gone wrong.

"The Greek coastguard asked the vessel to follow them, but they couldn't," a translator explained. "The coastguard then threw a rope but because they didn't know how to pull the rope, the vessel started dangling right and left.

"The coastguard boat was going too fast but the vessel was already dangling to the left, and that's how it sank."

Greece is observing three days of mourning. Campaigning has been suspended ahead of the parliamentary election on 25 June and a TV debate due to happen on Thursday has been cancelled.

Several marches in protest at the tragedy took place on Thursday evening, in the capital Athens, the second city Thessaloniki and elsewhere.

Greece is one of the main routes into the European Union for refugees and migrants from the Middle East, Asia and Africa.

Last month the Greek government came under international criticism over video reportedly showed the forceful expulsion of migrants who were set adrift at sea.

This story was originally published on BBC.

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