Current:Home > MarketsItaly migrant boat shipwreck: Whole families reportedly among victims who paid $8K each for "voyage of death" -Core Financial Strategies
Italy migrant boat shipwreck: Whole families reportedly among victims who paid $8K each for "voyage of death"
View
Date:2025-04-14 07:54:47
Crotone, Italy — Rescue teams pulled another body from the sea on Tuesday, bringing the death toll from Italy's latest migration tragedy to 64, as prosecutors identified suspected smugglers who allegedly charged 8,000 euros (nearly $8,500) each for the "voyage of death" from Turkey to Italy. Premier Giorgia Meloni sent a letter to European leaders demanding quick action to respond to the migration crisis, insisting that only way to deal with it seriously and humanely is to stop migrants from risking their lives on dangerous sea crossings.
"The point is, the more people who set off, the more people risk dying," she told RAI state television late Monday.
At least 64 people, including eight children, died when their overcrowded wooden boat slammed into the shoals just a few hundred meters off Italy's Calabrian coast and broke apart early Sunday in rough seas. Eighty people survived, but dozens more are feared dead since survivors indicated the boat had carried about 170 people when it set off last week from Izmir, Turkey.
Aid groups at the scene have said many of the passengers hailed from Afghanistan, including entire families, as well as from Pakistan, Syria and Iraq. Rescue teams pulled one body from the sea on Tuesday morning, bringing the death toll to 64, said Andrea Mortato, of the firefighter divers unit.
Crotone prosecutor Giuseppe Capoccia confirmed investigators had identified three suspected smugglers, a Turk and two Pakistani nationals. A second Turk is believed to have escaped or died in the wreck.
Italy's customs police said in a statement that crossing organizers charged 8,000 euros each for the "voyage of death."
As CBS News correspondent Seth Doane reported, the latest migrant boat tragedy on European shores stoked a roiling debate over how best to address the refugee and migrant crisis facing the continent. Italy's relatively new, staunchly right-wing government has been criticized by the United Nations and many migrant advocacy groups for adopting policies that inhibit charities from rescuing people from crippled boats in the Mediterranean.
Interior Minister Matteo Piantedosi pushed back strongly at suggestions that the rescue was delayed or affected by government policy discouraging aid groups from staying at sea to rescue migrants, however.
The EU border agency Frontex has said its aircraft spotted the boat off Crotone late Saturday and alerted Italian authorities. Italy sent out two patrol vessels, but they had to turn back because of the poor weather. The rescue operation then went out early Sunday after the boat had splintered.
"There was no delay," Piantedosi said. "Everything possible was done in absolutely prohibitive sea conditions."
Meloni's government — Italy's most far-right leadership since the days of dictator Benito Mussolini — swept elections last year in part on promises to crack down on migration.
During its first months in power, the government has concentrated on complicating efforts by humanitarian boats that had long carried out rescue operations in the central Mediterranean by assigning them ports of disembarkation along Italy's northern coasts. That means the vessels need more time to return to the sea after bringing migrants aboard and taking them safely to shore.
Piantedosi noted to newspaper Corriere della Sera that aid groups don't normally operate in the area of Sunday's shipwreck, which occurred off the Calabrian coast in the Ionian Sea. Rather, the aid groups tend to operate in the central Mediterranean, rescuing migrants who set off from Libya or Tunisia.
- In:
- Shipwreck
- Italy
- Boat Accident
- Smuggling
- Migrants
- European Union
- Human Trafficking
veryGood! (314)
Related
- Trump wants to turn the clock on daylight saving time
- Elite Kenyan police unit goes on trial in the killing of a prominent Pakistani journalist last year
- Jurors picked for trial of man suspected of several killings in Delaware and Pennsylvania
- Open enrollment starts this week for ACA plans. Here's what's new this year
- Backstage at New York's Jingle Ball with Jimmy Fallon, 'Queer Eye' and Meghan Trainor
- King Charles III is in Kenya for a state visit, his first to a Commonwealth country as king
- Canadian workers reach deal to end strike that shut down Great Lakes shipping artery
- Tarantula crossing road causes traffic accident in Death Valley National Park
- US appeals court rejects Nasdaq’s diversity rules for company boards
- Vonage customers to get nearly $100 million in refunds over junk fees
Ranking
- Juan Soto to be introduced by Mets at Citi Field after striking record $765 million, 15
- Vonage customers to get nearly $100 million in refunds over junk fees
- NBA debuts court designs for in-season tournament. Why aren't these big names all in?
- Progressive 'Bernie Brew' owner ordered to pay record $750,000 for defaming conservative publisher
- How to watch new prequel series 'Dexter: Original Sin': Premiere date, cast, streaming
- Paris police open fire on a woman who allegedly made threats in the latest security incident
- Zoë Kravitz and Channing Tatum Are Engaged After 2 Years of Dating
- 'Bun in the oven' is an ancient pregnancy metaphor. This historian says it has to go
Recommendation
Israel lets Palestinians go back to northern Gaza for first time in over a year as cease
Savings accounts now pay serious interest, but most of us aren't claiming it, survey finds
What Trump can say and can’t say under a gag order in his federal 2020 election interference case
Revisit Zoë Kravitz and Channing Tatum's Magical Road to Engagement
Could your smelly farts help science?
5 Things podcast: Americans are obsessed with true crime. Is that a good thing?
Flavor Flav goes viral after national anthem performance at Milwaukee Bucks game: Watch
China’s forces shadow a Philippine navy ship near disputed shoal, sparking new exchange of warnings