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World / Europe

New images capture Med's never-ending migrant tragedy

Published: 05 Oct 2016 - 02:59 pm | Last Updated: 16 Nov 2021 - 10:37 am
A migrant is rescued by members of Proactiva Open Arms NGO in the Mediterranean Sea, some 12 nautical miles north of Libya, on October 4, 2016. At least 1,800 migrants were rescued off the Libyan coast, the Italian coastguard announced, adding that simila

A migrant is rescued by members of Proactiva Open Arms NGO in the Mediterranean Sea, some 12 nautical miles north of Libya, on October 4, 2016. At least 1,800 migrants were rescued off the Libyan coast, the Italian coastguard announced, adding that simila

AFP

ABOARD THE ASTRAL, Italy: The stomach-churning horror, raw terror and delirious joy experienced during life-or-death rescues of crammed migrant boats have been captured in a series of powerful images of the latest deadly episode in the Mediterranean.

AFP photographer Aris Messinis was on board NGO boat The Astral as it battled to help a number of overcrowded rubber dinghies and a larger wooden vessel found in distress off the coast of Libya in a frantic operation that lasted from dawn until after dusk on Tuesday.

Hundreds of mainly African migrants were hauled to safety but dozens died agonising deaths from suffocation as a result of either toxic fumes or the panicked crush of too many bodies: 29 of them on one of the dinghies.

Messinis said a final count on Wednesday put the death toll at 32 and his photographs capture the extreme range of emotions produced by the drama.

Among the most striking is the hauntingly poignant respect shown by the survivors as they tiptoe over the lifeless bodies on their own way to safety.

In the water, an African man clings desperately to a float thrown in by the rescuers and tries to stretch his skinny leg out to help a fellow passenger floundering helplessly a yard (metre) away from him.

Other images reveal that there were many small children on board the boats; one is crying, perhaps sensing the prevailing sense of fear, others seem totally carefree, oblivious to the panic. 

One is held up above the crush of the crowd as if being offered up to God.

"There must have been about 1,000 people on board the (larger wooden) boat, spread over three levels," Messinis said.

"I went onboard and there was total panic, there were people jumping into the water, people trying to get out (from below deck)."

Italy's coastguard said it coordinated 33 different rescue operations on Tuesday and that 4,655 people had been saved, taking the total saved to more than 10,000 in two days.

- Four babies born -

At least nine corpses were recovered on Monday and the Libyan coastguard reported a separate sinking in which at least 11 people died.

Tuesday's drama underlined how easily the life-saving capacities of the multinational search and rescue operation off Libya can become critically stretched.

The Astral, which is operated by Spanish NGO ProActiva Open Arms, was on its own for hours after it first came across the stricken boats.

A relatively small converted yacht, it could not risk getting too close to any of the distressed vessels for fear that it could be capsized by the panicked migrants all trying to board it at once.

It was not until midday that an Italian navy vessel arrived to help. By then it may already have been too late for some of the victims, and it was after 10 pm when the operation was finally wrapped up.

Italy's coastguard and the charity MSF (Doctors without Borders) reported Wednesday that four pregnant women who were among the rescued had given birth on their way to Italian ports.

The number of pregnant women boarding migrant boats in Libya has increased significantly this year and it is not uncommon for them to go into labour as soon as they reach the safety of a rescue boat.

The 10,600 new arrivals will raise to more than 140,000 the total number of migrants or refugees to have landed in Italy since the start of this year.

The numbers are in line with the previous two years but Italy is now having to register and accommodate a bigger proportion of them under pressure from its EU partners, putting immense strain on its overcrowded reception centres and government coffers.