Twin Sisters Left Adrift in Mediterranean as Migrant Vessel Arrives in Italy
In a harrowing turn of events, two one-year-old twin girls are missing at sea after their migrant vessel reached the Italian island of Lampedusa earlier this week. Save the Children has confirmed that 61 people, including the missing sisters' mother and 22 unaccompanied minors, were rescued from the boat in "extremely difficult conditions" brought on by Cyclone Harry.
The organization reported that the migrants had braved stormy seas for at least three days before arriving in Lampedusa. However, they described having departed from Tunisia in a state of great physical and psychological distress. Tragically, one man died after disembarking the boat.
This incident marks the latest in a string of devastating maritime disasters off the coast of Lampedusa. Last October, 49 people, including 12 children under the age of five, lost their lives when their boat capsized while en route to Italy. The International Organization for Migration (IOM) has recorded nearly 1,000 deaths and disappearances in the Central Mediterranean this year alone.
The numbers are staggering: over 25,000 deaths since 2014, with at least 30 children losing their lives off the coast of Tunisia so far this year. Tunisian nationals make up more than 60 percent of Central Mediterranean crossings, largely due to high unemployment rates and deepening socioeconomic and political hardships in the country.
Save the Children's director of institutional relations, Giorgia D'Errico, is calling on the European Union to take responsibility for the lives lost during these perilous journeys. "We cannot silently watch the loss of human lives, including so many children," she said. "This unacceptable massacre must end."
In a harrowing turn of events, two one-year-old twin girls are missing at sea after their migrant vessel reached the Italian island of Lampedusa earlier this week. Save the Children has confirmed that 61 people, including the missing sisters' mother and 22 unaccompanied minors, were rescued from the boat in "extremely difficult conditions" brought on by Cyclone Harry.
The organization reported that the migrants had braved stormy seas for at least three days before arriving in Lampedusa. However, they described having departed from Tunisia in a state of great physical and psychological distress. Tragically, one man died after disembarking the boat.
This incident marks the latest in a string of devastating maritime disasters off the coast of Lampedusa. Last October, 49 people, including 12 children under the age of five, lost their lives when their boat capsized while en route to Italy. The International Organization for Migration (IOM) has recorded nearly 1,000 deaths and disappearances in the Central Mediterranean this year alone.
The numbers are staggering: over 25,000 deaths since 2014, with at least 30 children losing their lives off the coast of Tunisia so far this year. Tunisian nationals make up more than 60 percent of Central Mediterranean crossings, largely due to high unemployment rates and deepening socioeconomic and political hardships in the country.
Save the Children's director of institutional relations, Giorgia D'Errico, is calling on the European Union to take responsibility for the lives lost during these perilous journeys. "We cannot silently watch the loss of human lives, including so many children," she said. "This unacceptable massacre must end."