A undated
handout photo provided by the Hellenic Coast Guard shows migrants onboard a
boat during a rescue operation, before their boat capsized on the open sea, off
Greece, June 14, 2023. Hellenic Coast Guard/Handout via REUTERS
Reuters June 30, 2023
MALAKASA/KALAMATA,
Greece, June 30 (Reuters) – Survivors of a boat disaster that likely killed hundreds of
migrants near Greece have given accounts of traffickers in North Africa
cramming them into a clapped-out fishing trawler. They recounted hellish
conditions above and below deck, with no food or water.
Some also
said the tragic end, when it came, was precipitated by the actions of the
Greek coastguard. They have told judicial authorities of a doomed attempt
to tow the overloaded trawler that caused the vessel to capsize in the early
hours of June 14.
A
disastrous coastguard towing attempt was recounted in six of the nine
statements from survivors submitted to Greek judicial officials investigating
the causes of the tragedy, according to evidence seen by Reuters.
One Syrian
survivor said he and other migrants on board the Adriana, which had broken down
en route to Italy, screamed “Stop!” after a Greek coastguard vessel
attached a rope to the bow of the trawler and began to pull it while picking up
speed.
The migrant
boat tilted left and right and then it turned upside down, he added.
Three other
witnesses said they didn’t know what caused the Adriana to capsize. Reuters is
not publishing the names of the nine survivors who gave the accounts, which
haven’t been made public.
The
statements of the six witnesses clash with the public statements given by the
Greek coastguard and government, which have said no attempt was made
to tow the boat and that it overturned when the coastguard was about
70 meters away.
The shipping ministry,
which oversees the coastguard, told Reuters it couldn’t comment on issues
that were the subject of a confidential and ongoing investigation by
prosecutors. Greek prosecutors are forbidden by law from commenting on live
inquiries.
The nine
survivors submitted their accounts on June 17-18 to investigators conducting a
preliminary probe into the disaster. A group of suspected traffickers, arrested
on June 15 on charges including manslaughter, migrant smuggling and causing a
shipwreck, have been jailed pending a fuller investigation that could culminate
in a trial. They deny wrongdoing.
The towing
episode was also recounted by two other survivors who were separately
interviewed by Reuters and asked not to be identified for fear of reprisals
from Greek authorities. One of them, who gave his name only as Mohamed,
described the terrifying moments when the Adriana overturned, which he said
came when the coastguard started tugging the boat.
“They
quickly pulled us and the boat capsized. It moved to the right, to the left, to
the right and it capsized. People started to fall on each other,” he said.
“People were on top of each other, people were screaming, people were drowning
each other. It was night time and there were waves. It was scary.”
On June 15
a coastguard spokesperson, responding to local media reports that
cited some survivors who said the trawler was towed, publicly denied that
a coastguard vessel had attached a rope to the Adriana at any time.
A day
later, the coastguard amended its account: it said its vessel had
attached a rope to the Adriana to help it draw nearer to communicate.
The coastguard denied it had subsequently tried to tow the trawler,
saying it had kept its distance.
Nikos
Spanos, a retired admiral in the Greek coastguard, told Reuters it was
unlikely that a coastguard vessel would have attempted such a
dangerous maneuver as towing the stricken trawler.
“Its
(the coastguard’s) aim was to establish a better contact to help the
vessel and assess the situation. This is my understanding. Because if they had
tried to tow it or anything else, it would have been too risky and this
wouldn’t have been the right way to do it.”
‘NO HELP.
GO ITALY’
When the
Adriana capsized and sank 47 miles southwest of Pylos, in international waters
within Greece’s search-and-rescue jurisdiction, it was carrying between 400 and
750 migrants mostly from Syria, Egypt and Pakistan, the U.N. refugee agency
says.
A total of
104 survivors have been found but rescuers say it’s unlikely anyone else will
be recovered, dead or alive, in one of the of the deepest parts of the
Mediterranean.
The coastguard ship’s
log was also submitted to the judicial authorities and details two instances
two hours apart when the coastguard vessel approached the Adriana,
according to the evidence.
At 11:40
p.m. on June 13 the vessel approached the trawler, which had a malfunctioning
engine, and tied a rope to the boat to allow it to draw closer and talk to
those on board to assess the situation and if they needed help, the log said.
People on
board shouted “No help” and “Go Italy” and untied the rope, according to the
log which said the Adriana’s engine was then restarted and it headed west.
Then at
1:40 a.m., the coastguard vessel was instructed by its operation
center to return to the trawler to inspect its condition after the Adriana had
stopped moving.
The coastguard vessel
approached to a distance of about 70 meters from the Adriana and heard a lot of
shouting, and in under seven minutes the trawler had capsized, according to the
log.
$55 EXTRA
FOR ‘SAFER’ DECK
The Adriana
set off from a beach in or near the Libyan town of Tobruk around June 10,
according to survivors. Before they boarded, the traffickers took away their
belongings and threw out bottles of drinking water to make room for more
people, survivor Mohamed told Reuters.
Each
traveler only had 40 cm of space, a Syrian migrant told judicial authorities,
according to the evidence.
All 11
survivors said they paid between $4,500 to $6,000 for the journey, and the
smugglers told them they would reach Italy in three days. Three survivors told
authorities they paid anywhere from 50 to 200 euros ($55-220) extra for places
on the outer deck, considered safer.
They were
among thousands of people trying to get to southern Europe this year by setting
off in boats from North Africa. More than 50,000 “irregular border” crossings
of the Central Mediterranean, most of which begin in Tunisia and Libya, were
detected in the first five months of 2023, up 160% from a year ago, according
to EU border agency data.
A week
after the tragedy near Greece, more than 30 migrants were feared
dead after a dinghy headed for Spain’s Canary Islands sank.
(Additional
reporting by Renee Maltezou and Angeliki Koutantou in Athens, Jonathan Saul in
London and Riham Alkoussa in Berlin; Editing by Rachel Armstrong and Pravin
Char)
(c) Copyright Thomson Reuters 2023.
gcaptain.com
Δεν υπάρχουν σχόλια:
Δημοσίευση σχολίου