List of migrant vessel incidents on the Mediterranean Sea
This article is a list of migrant vessel incidents on the Mediterranean Sea leading up to and resulting from the European migrant crisis with recent migration also related to developments such as the Arab Spring protests (2010–2012), civil wars in Syria (since 2011) and Libya (2014–2020), and emerging conflicts in Sudan, Niger, and Israel and Palestine in 2023.
Over 28,000 people have died or have been declared missing while in migration across the Mediterranean Sea since 2014.[1] The 'Deaths at the Border' project at the University of Amsterdam estimates that a further 3,188 people died while trying to reach Europe between 1990 and 2013.[2]
By comparison, a total of 609 people lost their lives in maritime accidents between 2011 and 2021 which involved vessels registered by European Union countries or other registered vessels in EU waters.[3]
Routes and context
editThe International Organization for Migration (IOM) has identified three key routes through which migrants in the region travel into Europe by sea or, in some cases, in journeys along coasts:
- the Central Mediterranean route from North Africa (mainly Libya and Tunisia) to Italy and, to a lesser degree, Malta;
Journeys before these crossings also carry a high risk for the people involved as they include crossing remote terrains, such as the Sahara Desert, and residing in countries in conflict such as Libya and Syria,[4] from where civil wars with international intervention have led to considerable forced migration since the Arab Spring.
Economic differences between the countries on the shores of the Mediterranean also contribute to economic migration to Europe as people seek higher wages and a better quality of life for themselves and their families. IMF data for 2023 provide the following ranking in gross domestic product (GDP) per capita, adjusted for purchasing power parity (PPP), in countries on major routes:[5]
GDP per capita in Turkey ($41,412) and Greece ($39,478) is comparable, although the Aegean Sea is a transit route for migrants from elsewhere. Southern Italy and Andalusia are, by this measure, similar to North Africa ($17,000-18,000) although the Schengen zone allows for further northward migration.[6][7]
Countries beyond immediate countries of origin experience considerable conflict and widespread poverty (and, increasingly, climate change) within a relatively short journey time to Europe. Some of the world's lowest living standards are experienced in Syria ($6,374 per capita GDP at pre-war levels), Sudan ($4,471) and Niger (£1,600).[5]
1990–2015
editDuring the Cold War, migration by land or sea in the region was limited (or highly regulated) by the presence of authoritarian regimes but also facilitated by relatively generous safe and legal immigration routes into Western Europe. In the years from 1990 onwards, migration across the Mediterranean Sea and Adriatic Sea increased for both economic reasons (with people travelling from developing countries in Africa and Asia) and as a result of conflict.
For example, several conflicts in Africa, the Yugoslav Wars (1991–2001), the Algerian Civil War (1991–2002), and the 1997 civil unrest in Albania prompted several million people to leave or consider leaving their home countries as refugees. The events of the Arab Spring had a similar effect early in the second decade of the 21st Century, especially as a result of wars in Syria and Libya.
The loss of European ships, such as the Costa Concordia in 2012, received substantially more public and media attention than that of migrant vessels during this time.[8]
Pope Francis, however, highlighted the plight of migrants in 2013 when he visited Lampedusa, a southern Italian island which frequently serves as a reception centre for migrants. He remarked: "These brothers and sisters of ours were trying to escape difficult situations to find some serenity and peace; they were looking for a better place for themselves and their families, but instead they found death. How often do such people fail to find understanding, fail to find acceptance, fail to find solidarity. And their cry rises up to God."[9]
2014 was a turning point in terms of scale, although that does not diminish the sense of loss experienced by families and in home communities in previous times. In that year, 3,538 people died or went missing at sea according to UNHCR statistics; 3,289 dead or missing persons were recorded by the IOM's Missing Migrants Project. In trends repeated year on year from then onwards, most loss of life occurred in the Central Mediterranean area between Italy, Libya, Malta and Tunisia (but not exclusively) and mainly due to drowning (although with other accidents and causes also present).[10][11]
Around 500 people died during the 2014 Malta migrant shipwreck on 11 September 2014.[12] The eleven survivors included Doaa Al Zamel, whose story is featured in the 2017 book, A Hope More Powerful than the Sea.[13]
Date | Location | Passengers | Confirmed deaths |
Missing | Known survivors |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
21 May 2007 | off Malta | 53 | 0 | 53 | 0 |
27 March 2009 | off Libya | cca. 250 | 98 | cca. 131 | 21 |
March/April 2009 | off Libya | cca. 250 | 0 | cca. 250 | 0 |
March/April 2009 | off Libya | cca. 250 | 0 | cca. 250 | 0 |
6 April 2011 | off Lampedusa | cca. 300 | 20 | 130+ | 51 |
3 October 2013 | off Lampedusa | 500+ | 359 | 30+ | 155 |
11 October 2013 | off Lampedusa | 200+ | 34 | 20+ | 147 |
30 June 2014 | off Pozzallo | 600+ | 45 | 0 | 566 |
11 September 2014 | off Malta | 500+ | 0 | 500+ | 9 |
15 September 2014 | off Libya | cca. 250 | 0 | cca. 250 | 36 |
2015
editDate | 2015 |
---|---|
Cause | Vessels capsized |
Outcome | Sinkings of several vessels, search and rescue operations |
Deaths | 1,555 |
Missing | 2,216 (UNHCR estimate) |
The year 2015 became the most significant in the crisis until that time, in terms of people dying or missing while migrating across the Mediterranean Sea, accompanied by a major increase in international public and media attention. A total of 3,771 deaths or incidents of individual missing persons were recorded by the UNHCR – 2,216 missing and 1,555 found dead.
The Central Mediterranean accounted for the majority of casualties – 2,911 people – followed by 793 in the Eastern Mediterranean and 67 in the Western Mediterranean.[14]
The IOM estimates that the total number of dead and missing people was higher, at 4,055 persons, although in similar locations by route – 3,149 in the Central region, 804 in the Eastern region, and 102 in the Western region – and 3,737 by drowning and 113 through related accidents.[15][16]
April
editOn 13 April 2015, a vessel sank off the Libyan coast with up to 550 migrants on board. More than 400 people are believed to have drowned.[17] 144–150 people were rescued and were taken to a hospital in Southern Italy.[18] The capsizing occurred 60 nautical miles (110 km) off the Libyan coast.[19]
Air and sea search operations started in the location of the shipwreck, looking for survivors. Nine bodies were recovered; the Italian Coast Guard stated that "no more survivors have been found".
On 16 April, four immigrants arriving in Sicily said they were the only survivors of a sunken ship. They said that 41 people had drowned when their vessel overturned and sank shortly after departing from Libya.[20][21] In an unrelated incident, 15 people were arrested in Sicily following reports that they had thrown 12 other passengers overboard, causing them to drown. According to eyewitnesses, a fight had broken out between Christian and Muslim groups on a boat that left Libya on 14 April, resulting in 12 Christians being thrown overboard.[22][23]
On Saturday, 18 April, a boat that had just left the port city of Zuwarah, Tripoli, capsized off the Libyan coast during the night, with up to 850 migrants aboard. 28 people were rescued.[24] The incident happened 60 miles (97 km) off the Libyan coast and 120 miles (190 km) south of the southern Italian island, Lampedusa.[25] The boat may have capsized when people on board moved to one side when a ship approached. Italian prosecutors say that a Bangladeshi survivor estimated 950 people were on board, and smugglers locked hundreds of the migrants in the ship's hold.[26] Among the people on board were about 350 Eritreans, 200 Senegalese, as well as migrants from Syria, Somalia, Sierra Leone, Mali, Gambia, Ivory Coast and Ethiopia.[27][28] The Maltese Navy and Italian Coast Guard began mounting a rescue operation.[29] Despite 18 ships joining the rescue effort, only 28 survivors and 24 bodies were pulled from the water by nightfall.[30][26] This incident is cited by some as the shipwreck with the highest death toll in the history of the Mediterranean.[31] In June 2016, Italian Navy conducted a recovery operation and raised the boat from a depth of 370 metres (1,214 ft) by a specially designed robotic apparatus. The wreck was brought to a port in Sicily by the MPSV Levoli Ivory and was kept in a refrigerated transport structure. Over the course of twelve days, Italian fire officers recovered human remains.[32] Among other incidents, however, the sinking of the SS Oria in 1944, with a death toll of over 4,000, claimed more lives.
On 21 April Italian officials reported that the Tunisian captain of the boat had been charged with reckless multiple homicide. It was also reported that the children on board had drowned because they were trapped on the boat's lower two levels.[30][33]
The Italian Navy, at the request of the Prosecutor of Catania, has made available the minesweepers Gaeta and Vieste, along with the corvette Sfinge, for search and localization of the vessel sank.
On 7 May 2015 a wreck of a length of 25 metres was located approximately 85 miles north east of the Libyan coast at a depth of 375 metres. The Italian Navy said it was correlated with the wreck of the vessel sank on 18 April.[34]
A boat carrying migrants reportedly sank off the east coast of Rhodes, Greece on 20 April, after striking a reef. Initial reports suggested that there had been at least three deaths. 93 people were rescued from the water, with 30 individuals hospitalized.[35] In contrast to the other wrecked ships, which have come from Libya, this boat had departed from Turkey.[36]
Two further reports of ships in distress in the waters between Libya and Italy appeared on 20 April.[37] It was stated that one boat contained up to 150 people, with the other containing up to 300. The precise locations of these boats was not revealed, and it was unclear whether these reports refer to separate vessels.[38] The Italian and Maltese navies are reported as having responded to these calls.[30][38] On Tuesday 21 April it was reported that all 450 passengers had been rescued, despite initial reports of deaths.[39]
May
editRescue operations and landings of migrants continued on the coasts of Sicily and Calabria. The ship Phoenix arrived in Pozzallo carrying 369 migrants. Other 675 people landed in Augusta and in 300 were rescued off the coast of Calabria. A ship container Zeran, arrived in Catania with 197 people, there were five dead bodies. According to Save the Children 40 other immigrants lost their lives at sea.[40] In Crotone the Panamanian tanker Prince I brought 250 migrants rescued to the Channel of Sicily, but also the bodies of three others, two women and a man, recovered at sea during a rescue.
Meanwhile, there was also alarm over diseases: about 150 of the 675 migrants who arrived on the ship Vega in Augusta[41][42] were put in isolation in the port for suspected cases of chickenpox and scabies.[43] For doctors there is no danger of contagion and the situation would be under control.[clarification needed] Most patients are tested and debilitated by a wait of two months in warehouses in Libya with little food and water.[citation needed]
In Trapani, 104 immigrants arrived on a cargo ship; another 483 arrived in Palermo on the Italian Navy ship Borsini. This also led to a growth of the number of smugglers arrested by the Italian police forces.
Off the coast of Calabria, a rescue operation at about 300 migrants on board a fishing vessel in poor buoyancy occurred about 80 miles from the coast of Calabria.
The Italian Navy rescued 217 migrants who were on board the boats adrift in the channel of Sicily. Also recovered 17 corpses. In the last 24 hours rescued 3,300 migrants.[44]
July
edit283 migrants aboard three boats were rescued by the German warship Schleswig-Holstein at few miles from the Libyan coast and landed in the port of Augusta in Sicily, while 40 are missing or dead according to the testimonies of survivors.
August
edit49 migrants killed by fumes while packed into hold and prevented from exiting the hold by the ship's crew off the coast of Libya; survivors were rescued by the Italian Navy and the ship's captain and crew were arrested.[45][46]
Six migrants drown off the coast of Turkey attempting to reach a Greek island.[47]
50 migrants killed by fumes while packed into the hold and prevented from exiting by the ship's crew off the coast of Libya; survivors were rescued by a Swedish unit. On the boat there traveled another 400 migrants who were rescued.
September
editA further 96 confirmed deaths were recorded in September 2015.
Date | Location | Passengers | Confirmed deaths | Missing | Known survivors |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
13 April[48] | off Libya | cca. 550 | 9 | 400+ | 144–150 |
19 April | off Libya | cca. 850 | 24 | 800+ | 28 |
20 April | off Rhodes | 96 | 3 | 0 | 93 |
3 May[49] | off Libya | 3500 (multiple vessels) | 10+ | ? | ? |
5 May | off Catania | Unknown | 5 | 40+ | 197 |
5 May | off Crotone | 250+ | 3 | Unknown | 250 |
29 May[44] | off Lampedusa | 234+ | 17 | Unknown | 217 |
23 July | off Libya | 300+ | 40+ | 40+ | 283 |
27 July | off Libya | 522 | 13 | ? | ? |
1 August | off Libya | 780 | 5 | ? | ? |
5 August | off Libya | 370 | 26 | 200 | ? |
11 August | off Libya | 120 | 50 | 50+ | ? |
15 August[45][46] | off Libya | cca. 400 | 49 | 0 | cca. 350 |
18 August[47] | off Turkey | Unknown | 6 | Unknown | 0 |
25 August | off Libya | cca. 450 | 50 | 0 | cca. 400 |
27 August | off Libya | ? | 160 | 200+ | ? |
30 August | off Libya | ? | 7 | ? | ? |
1 September | off Kos | ? | 11 | ? | ? |
6 September | off Lampedusa | ? | 20 | ? | ? |
13 September | off Farmakonissi | 112 | 34 | ? | ? |
15 September | off Turkey | 250 | 22 | ? | ? |
30 September | off Lesbos | ? | 2 | 11 ? | 45 |
2016
edit2016 marked the highest number of deaths and disappearances at sea – 5,096 as recorded by the UNHCR. The majority of these casualties were caused in incidents in the Central region (resulting in 4,234 persons dead or missing), followed by the Eastern region (760 persons), and the Western region (102 persons).[50] Information gathered by the IOM found a similar total, of 5,136 persons dead or missing at sea, including 4,498 by drowning.[51]
On 21 September 2016, a boat capsized off the Egyptian coast with around 600 migrants on board in the Mediterranean Sea. 204 bodies were recovered (including at least 30 children) and around 160 people were rescued, as tens of people remain missing, with approximately 300 people predicted to have died. Four people were arrested for trafficking and breaking capacity laws. The incident may be the worst this year in the Mediterranean Sea.[52][53][54][55]
On 3 November, around 240 people died in two migrant boat capsizing incidents off the coast of Libya. 29 people survived the first wreck, with about 120 deaths reported. Only two people survived the second wreck, with again around 120 deaths reported.[56] Another hundred people are believed to have drowned off the coast when their boat sank after they were abandoned off Libya without a motor on 17 November. 27 survivors were transported to Italy. An estimated 4,700 people have died trying to cross the Mediterranean Sea in 2016.[57]
2017
editThis section needs expansion. You can help by adding to it. (December 2023) |
In 2017, the number of people who died or were declared missing at sea remained tragically high, despite being lower than in each of the two preceding years. According to the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR), an estimated 3,139 people lost their lives or went missing while attempting to cross the Mediterranean. Of this figure, 2,344 individuals were reported as missing, while 795 were confirmed dead.
The Central Mediterranean route accounted for the vast majority of these casualties, with 2,874 deaths or disappearances. This route, often utilized by migrants attempting to reach Europe from North Africa, has long been recognized as one of the most dangerous migratory paths in the world.[58] In contrast, the Eastern Mediterranean saw a significant decrease in fatalities, with only 56 people recorded as dead or missing. The Western Mediterranean, however, accounted for 209 deaths or disappearances. These figures highlight the ongoing peril faced by migrants attempting these dangerous journeys.[59]
The International Organization for Migration (IOM) corroborated these estimates, recording a similar total of 3,139 deaths and disappearances. The IOM also noted that 2,891 of these deaths were due to drowning, further emphasizing the hazardous nature of these sea crossings.[60]
Throughout 2017, the death toll fluctuated monthly, with a peak occurring in May, when 623 individuals lost their lives. June followed closely behind, with 539 reported dead or missing. Tragically, there was at least one significant maritime disaster, resulting in more than 20 casualties, recorded every month of the year, except for December. These statistics serve as a sobering reminder of the extreme risks that migrants face in their search for safety and better opportunities, particularly on the treacherous Mediterranean routes.
2018
editThis section needs expansion. You can help by adding to it. (December 2023) |
The number of casualties continued to decrease in 2018 although it remained substantial at 2,270 deaths and disappearances. A total of 1,600 people were missing at sea and 670 found dead after a sinking.[61]
This year continued to see significant loss of life in the Central Mediterranean (1,279 dead or missing persons estimated by the UNHCR) and the Western Mediterranean (804 deaths or missing person incidents), and also 187 in the Eastern region. The Missing Migrants Project recorded 2,337 migrants as dead or missing, including 2,214 in drowning incidents.[62]
On 8 October, Italian authorities rescued 22 Europe-bound migrants from a boat carrying around 50 people. At the time of the rescue, the bodies of 13 women were also found, and it was later revealed that others were still missing. On 16 October, Italian authorities found the bodies of at least 12 people who had died in the incident.[63]
In November, Italian coast guards rescued 149 Europe-bound migrants after their boat capsized on 23 November. Italian coast guards found five dead bodies afterwards and confirmed that the death toll from the incident totalled at least 18.[64]
2019
editThis section needs expansion. You can help by adding to it. (December 2023) |
UNHCR statistics record that 1,335 people died or were declared missing on migration routes in the Mediterranean Sea in 2019 – of whom 1,063 were missing and 272 found dead. Most of these casualties occurred on the Central route (754), followed by the Western route (510) and the Eastern route (74).[65]
The IOM Missing Migrants Project has indicated a higher total – of 1,885 people dead and missing at sea – although with similar trends for location of casualties: 1,262 in the Central region, 552 in the Western region, and 71 in the Eastern region. In total, there were 1,795 drownings and 90 deaths caused otherwise or where the cause was not known.[66]
2020
editThis section needs expansion. You can help by adding to it. (December 2023) |
The UNHCR recorded that 1,409 people died or were declared missing on Mediterranean migration routes in 2020 – 839 missing and 570 found dead. As in the previous year, most casualties occurred on the Central route (955), followed by the Western route (241) and the Eastern route (105).[67]
A similar number was recorded by the Missing Migrants Project – i.e. 1,449 dead or missing persons, of whom 1,000 lost their lives in the Central region, 343 in the Western region, and 106 in the Eastern region. Most incidents took place later in the year as all international travel was restricted in lockdowns during the Covid-19 pandemic, and 1,375 deaths were attributed to drowning.[68]
2021
editThis section needs expansion. You can help by adding to it. (December 2023) |
Trends in casualties in 2021 returned to those experienced in 2018, with a total of 2,078 people recorded as dead or missing by the UNHCR – 1,214 missing and 864 found dead.
Three-quarters of casualties took place in the Central Mediterranean (1,545) with 418 in Western region and 115 in the Eastern region respectively.[69] This broadly corresponded with the 2,048 people recorded as dead or missing by the Missing Migrants Project, in similar locations or estimated locations, with almost all (2,011) losing their lives in drowning incidents.[70]
2022
editThis section needs expansion. You can help by adding to it. (December 2023) |
Further increases in casualties resulting from sinkings took place in 2022, when 2,439 people died or went missing at sea according to UNHCR sources – 1,452 in the Central Mediterranean, 653 in the Western Mediterranean, and 343 in the Eastern Mediterranean.[71] A similar total (of 2,411 people) was recorded by the Missing Migrants Project with 2,262 drownings reported or estimated.[72]
2023
editThis section needs expansion. You can help by adding to it. (March 2024) |
From January to December 2023, inclusive, the UNHCR recorded that 3,160 people died or were declared missing at sea on Mediterranean migration routes; of these, 1,086 people were confirmed dead and a further 2,074 reported as missing. The majority of deaths and disappearances took place in the Central Mediterranean (1,908), followed by the Eastern Mediterranean (799) and Western Mediterranean (453) respectively.[73] the IOM recorded 3,105 deaths or disappearances over the same year.[74]
An attempted coup in Sudan in April 2023 was followed by further conflict which led to forced migration, including the arrival of over 280,000 refugees into Egypt.[75] Natural disasters such as the Marrakesh-Safi earthquake in Morocco and the effects of Storm Daniel in Libya in September 2023, and the Hamas-Israel War may have also led to migration by people affected.
February
editOn 26 February, more than 70 people were killed in the 2023 Calabria migrant boat disaster off the southern coast of Italy.[76]
March
editOn 1 March, two people were killed when a boat carrying 30 migrants capsized off the coast of Kos, Greece.[77]
On 9 March, at least 14 people were killed and 54 rescued when their boat trying to reach Europe sank off the coast of Sfax region, Tunisia.[78]
On 12 March, at least 30 people were reported missing and 17 others were rescued after a boat that was sailing from Libya to Italy sank. All those involved in the incident were reportedly Bangladeshi migrants.[79]
On 23 March, at least 5 people were killed and 33 others reported missing after their boat, which was sailing to Europe from Tunisia, sank.[80]
On 24 March, at least 34 people were reported missing after their boat, which was travelling from Sfax to Italy, sank.[80]
On 26 March, at least 29 people were killed when their boat sank off the coast of Tunisia. 5 of them were rescued.[81][82]
April
editOn 12 April, a boat carrying migrants travelling from sub-Saharan Africa sank, resulting in the deaths of at least 25 people.[83]
June
editOn 14 June, at least 82 people were killed when a boat carrying about 750 people from Tobruk, Libya capsized off the coast of Greece. 104 people were rescued, 30 hospitalized in Kalamata, and over 500 others reported missing.[84][85][86]
July
editOn 9 July, a boat carrying migrants from Tunisia sank, killing 1 person and leaving 10 others missing. Eleven people were rescued by the Tunisian coast guard.[87]
December
editOn 16 December, a boat carrying about 86 migrants from Libya sank, drowning over 60 people including women and children.[88]
See also
editIndividual incidents
- Sinking of F174 (near Sicily in 1996)
- Tragedy of Otranto (between Italy and Albania in 1997)
- 2004 Karaburun, Albania, shipwreck
- 2006 Karaburun, Turkey, shipwreck
- 2007 Malta shipwreck
- 2007 Seferihisar, Turkey, shipwreck
- 2009 Libya shipwreck
- 2011 Lampedusa shipwreck
- 2012 Baradan Bay, Turkey, shipwreck
- 2012 Lesbos, Greece, shipwreck
- 2013 Lampedusa shipwreck
- 2014 Aegean Sea shipwreck
- 2014 Mediterranean ghost boat investigation (probable sinking)
- 2014 Libya shipwreck
- Death of Alan Kurdi (2 September 2015)
- 2014 Malta shipwreck
- 2016 Egypt shipwreck
- 2016 Libya shipwrecks
- 2018 Libya shipwrecks
- 2022 Tartus shipwreck
- 2023 Calabria shipwreck
- 2023 Tunisia shipwreck
- 2023 Messenia shipwreck
- 2023 Libya shipwrecks
Responses in the region
- Lampedusa immigrant reception center
- List of ships for the rescue of refugees
- Operation Poseidon (2006-2015)
- Operation Hermes (2011-2013)
- Operation Mare Nostrum (2013–2014)
- Operation Triton (2014–2018)
- Operation Themis (2018 onwards)
- Operation Sophia (2015–2020)
- Operation Irini (2020 onwards)
European migration issues
- Immigration to Europe
- African immigration to Europe
- European migrant crisis
- Immigration to Italy
- Immigration to Greece
- List of migrant vehicle incidents in Europe (on land)
References
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