Report: 60 Migrant Fatalities as Dinghy Sinks in Mediterranean

Facts

  • At least 60 people have died, reportedly of dehydration and hunger, while attempting to cross the Mediterranean Sea in a rubber dinghy that broke down after departing from Libya on March 8.1
  • According to the international humanitarian organization SOS Mediterranee, the dinghy's motor failed three days into the voyage from Zawiya. Its rescue ship carried the 25 survivors to Ancona, Italy.2
  • The organization said the survivors — all male, including 12 minors — were from Senegal, Mali, and The Gambia and were found floating on a deflating dinghy in a serious condition and with burns from onboard fuel.3
  • The migrants were on the central Mediterranean route, one of the world's most dangerous sea migration pathways, which took the lives of at least 2.5K migrants in 2023 and has killed nearly 226 this year.4
  • SOS Mediterranee's rescue ship also rescued 113 migrants, including six women and two children, found adrift on a wooden boat off the Libyan coast on Wednesday.5

Sources: 1BBC News, 2France 24, 3ITV News, 4Al Jazeera and 5PBS NewsHour.

Narratives

  • Pro-establishment narrative, as provided by International Organization for Migration. With a toll of at least 8.5K, an increase of 20% from the previous year, 2023 was the deadliest ever on the world's migration routes. While a little more than 50% of tragic fatalities were caused by drownings, nearly 10% lost their lives in vehicle accidents, and another 7% by sheer violence. Attempting to cross the Mediterranean alone cost the lives of at least 3K — either dead or missing. The global community must unite to stem these tragedies and restore survivors' dignity.
  • Right narrative, as provided by The Telegraph. There is a horrific migration crisis worldwide and at Europe's doorstep in the Mediterranean. It's vital to work upstream of the problem — to dismantle migrant smuggling networks and even consider repatriation agreements with nations such as Libya. Collaborating with countries like Turkey to bolster maritime law enforcement and surveillance operations can also greatly help to reduce Mediterranean tragedies in the future.
  • Left narrative, as provided by Al Jazeera. Europe's rising far-right has long instrumentalized migration as a political tool. Their rhetoric overwhelms even the heart-breaking tragedies of the dead and survivors of perilous journeys. Xenophobia has even managed to shape policy as asylum seekers are subjected to detention, deportation, and even violence. Such short-sightedness only erodes the basic international norms that Europe has historically been a proponent of. What is needed, instead, are more sophisticated and human-centered migration policies in the Mediterranean and beyond.

Predictions