Rome (CNN) — “Today is a day of tears,” Pope Francis said Friday in reference to a shipwreck off the tiny Italian island of Lampedusa a day earlier, in which at least 110 people died.
Italy’s government declared Friday a day of national mourning in the wake of the shipwreck.
And there are fears the death toll could rise further since the boat, which capsized after catching fire just half a mile off the coast, may have been carrying as many as 500 migrants from Africa.
Antonio Candela, a doctor with the local health department said Thursday that 154 people had been rescued. But the chances of finding more survivors in the Mediterranean waters seem slim, a day after tragedy struck.
Lampedusa, not far from Sicily and the closest Italian island to Africa, has become a destination for tens of thousands of refugees seeking to enter European Union countries. And such wrecks of migrant boats, although on a smaller scale, have become all too common.
Pope Francis, who gave his unscripted remarks while meeting with the poor on a visit to Assisi, the birthplace of his namesake Saint Francis, also railed Thursday against what occurred in Lampedusa.
Labeling the tragedy a “disgrace,” he called for concerted action to ensure it is not repeated in future.
He visited Lampedusa in July to pray for refugees and migrants lost at sea, and criticized then what he called “global indifference” to the island’s refugee crisis.
The boat that sank Thursday include Eritreans, Somalis and Ghanaians, the coast guard said, and the boat is believed to have launched from Libya’s coast.
Despite the dangers of taking to the sea in boats that are often barely seaworthy, thousands of migrants and asylum seekers depart North Africa’s shores every year in search of a better life.
Another 13 men drowned off Italy’s southern coast Monday when they attempted to swim ashore, the U.N refugee agency said Thursday.
And last week, the Italian coast guard rescued a ship bound for Lampedusa from Tunisia that had 398 Syrian refugees on board.
Overcrowded boats
Just under 115 kilometers (70 miles) from Tunisia, Lampedusa has been the first point of entry to Europe for more than 200,000 refugees and irregular migrants who have passed through the island since 1999.
But boats carrying migrants often are in peril at sea.
In recent years, the Italian Coast Guard says it has been involved in the rescue of more than 30,000 refugees around the island.
Izabella Cooper, a spokeswoman for the European Union’s border agency, Frontex, told CNN that migrants are often sent to sea in overcrowded vessels without the engine power to make such a long and dangerous journey.
Since the start of the year, Frontex — which supports the efforts of individual EU member states — has helped save more than 16,000 lives in search-and-rescue operations, she said.
“Italy is currently facing the biggest migratory pressure of all European countries,” she said, with more than 31,500 reaching its shores since the beginning of the year.
The migrants mainly set off from Libya but others also leave from Egypt, she said. “We see an increasing amount of Eritreans, Somalis, to a lesser extent sub-Saharan Africans, and an increasing number of Syrian nationals.”
While Italy is the current focus of efforts by migrants and asylum-seekers hoping to enter the European Union, Cooper said, that has not always been the case.
“Seven years ago it was the Canary Islands, then the pressure moved to the central Mediterranean, then it moved to Greece — then with the Arab Spring, it moved back to Italy,” she said.
“There are definitely too many lives lost and definitely too many tragedies in the Mediterranean.”
Dead or missing at sea
Rights group Amnesty International called for both Italy and the European Union to do more to safeguard the thousands who risk their lives each year in the hope of protection or a better life, rather than focusing on closing off the borders.
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According to a briefing published by the U.N. refugee agency in July, the peak crossing period for migrants and asylum-seekers runs from May to September.
The U.N. refugee agency recorded some 40 deaths in the first six months of 2013, a figure based on interviews with survivors of the crossing.
For 2012 as a whole, some 15,000 migrants and asylum-seekers reached Italy and Malta — and almost 500 people were reported dead or missing at sea, it said.
The U.N. agency credits the efforts of the Italian coast guard and Maltese armed forces for a reduction in migrant deaths in the first half of 2013 compared with the previous year.
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