News UN: 1,500 migrants died in Mediterranean By maritimemag July 27, 2018 ShareTweet 0 FILE PHOTO: Migrants intercepted aboard a dinghy off the coast in the Mediterranean Sea, help rescuers to unload their dinghy from a rescue boat after arriving at the port of Malaga, southern Spain July 7, 2018. REUTERS/Jon Nazca BABATUNDE SCOTT | For the fifth straight year, the United Nations has said that 1,500 migrants perished in the Mediterranean, with the route between Libya and Italy being the deadliest. In a statement released on Friday by the International Organisation for Migration (IOM), Spain, which has overtaken Italy as the preferred destination, registered nearly 21,000 migrants so far this year. The IOM further stated that this is more than all of 2017. In all, according to IOM, about 55,000 migrants have reached European shores so far this year, against more than double that number at this time last year, 111,753. Italy, whose new government has closed its ports to rescue vessels, has had about 18,130 migrants arriving by sea from Libya this year, with the rest going to Greece, Malta and Cyprus. “It’s important to note two things: one is that despite incredibly low numbers arriving to Italy, the per capita death or the rate of death per 1,000 people may be at its highest point since the emergency began,” IOM spokesman Joel Millman told a Geneva news conference. Referring to the 1,500 death toll, he said: “It’s only once in the previous four years (that) this mark has been reached later than this date in July and that was in 2014 when the emergency was really just starting”. More than 600 African migrants forced their way through the heavily fortified border fence separating the Spanish North African enclave of Ceuta from Morocco on Thursday, using circular saws, shears and mallets to cut through the wire. “What we can say is that the first indications that we are getting from the Spanish authorities is that it is the West African migrants that were most prominent crossing into Libya in the past couple of years who seem to be choosing Spain as their route now,” Millman said. He said the death rate on the western Mediterranean route to Spain is about one in 70 migrants. © 2018, maritimemag. All rights reserved.
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