Baby among at least two killed as migrant boat sinks off Tunisia

A migrant child cries as he is rescued by Tunisia's National Guard on Saturday
A migrant child cries as he is rescued by Tunisia's National Guard on Saturday - GETTY IMAGES

At least two Tunisians including a baby died when their boat sank soon after leaving the country’s shores on Saturday, the coastguard said.

Tunisia is a major gateway for migrants attempting perilous voyages across the Mediterranean in often rickety boats in hope of a better life.

The vessel carrying 20 Tunisians went down at 2.00am when it was less than 400 feet from the coast in Gabes, the North African country’s coastguard said.

“Two bodies have been recovered, one of a 20-year-old man and the other of an infant,” it said in a statement.

Five passengers were missing, the coastguard said, adding search operations were ongoing and 13 others had been rescued, including the baby’s parents.

Authorities in the city of Gabes have launched an investigation to “determine the circumstances of this tragedy”, it added.

Thousands of migrants set off from Tunisia's coast every month
Thousands of migrants set off from Tunisia's coast every month - GETTY IMAGES

Witnesses said the boat had just left Gabes when those on board saw a trawler they mistook for a coastguard vessel.

They tried to turn around, fishermen told journalists, but the boat capsized and the baby became stuck in nets on deck, the witnesses said.

More than 1,800 people have died this year in shipwrecks on the central Mediterranean migration route, the world’s deadliest - more than twice as many as last year, according to the International Organisation for Migration.

On Monday judicial officials reported the deaths of 11 migrants in a shipwreck off Sfax, with dozens more missing.

The eastern Tunisian port city located about 80 miles from the Italian island of Lampedusa has emerged as a key migrant launchpad.

Five passengers onboard the boat are missing
Five passengers onboard the boat are missing - GETTY IMAGES

The Tunisian coastguard says it intercepted 34,290 migrants in the six months to June 20, most from sub-Saharan African countries, compared with 9,217 over the same period in 2022.

The number of Africans trying to make the crossing has risen sharply since Tunisian President Kais Saied alleged in a February 21 speech that “hordes” of irregular migrants were causing crime and posing a demographic threat to the mainly Arab country.

Many have also fled since hundreds of migrants were arrested or chased into the desert after the deadly stabbing of a Tunisian man in a brawl with migrants in Sfax on July 3.

In July, the European Union signed an agreement with Tunisia that provides for about £90 million in direct European aid to prevent the departure of migrant boats and combat smugglers.

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