52 migrants feared dead as boat capsizes near Spain’s Canary Islands


FE Team | Published: August 20, 2021 19:49:29 | Updated: August 22, 2021 10:22:44


Spain's Maritime Rescue Service said a 30-year-old woman was the only survivor pulled from the vessel -Reuters photo

More than 50 people are feared dead after a boat capsized in the Atlantic Ocean about 220 kilometres (135 miles) off Spain’s Canary Islands.

According to Al Jazeera, Spain’s Maritime Rescue Service said a 30-year-old woman was the sole survivor saved on Thursday from the sinking dinghy, which had left Africa a week earlier carrying 53 migrants and refugees.

“A merchant ship had earlier spotted the vessel south of the Canary Islands and alerted Spanish emergency services,” Al Jazeera said in a report citing news agencies.

“The woman was clinging to the sinking craft with a dead man and a dead woman next to her, a rescue service official, who spoke on condition of anonymity,” the report said quoting The Associated Press.

“Weather conditions were reported to be bad at the time,” it added.

She told rescuers that the inflatable boat had embarked from the Western Sahara coast and that the passengers were from Ivory Coast.

“The woman had been airlifted to hospital in Las Palmas, on the island of Gran Canaria,” the report said.

Migrant and refugee deaths are common in an area of the Atlantic that separates the West Coast of Africa and Spain’s Canary Islands but shipwrecks on the route are hard to verify, and most victims’ bodies are never recovered.

At least 250 people died on the route to the Spanish archipelago in the first six months of 2021, according to the United Nations’ migration agency.

Migrant rights group Walking Borders counted almost 2,000 deaths in the same period.

So far this year, more than 7,500 migrants and refugees have made the dangerous crossing, at least twice as many as in the same period in 2020, which itself saw an eightfold increase from 2019.

With arrival facilities on the Canary Islands packed to capacity, authorities have housed thousands of people in camps criticised by rights groups for their conditions.

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