|
Roma, Italy, July 28, 2012 – About 90 Somali migrants stranded on a boat
in the Mediterranean Sea for more than four days have been rescued, an
Italian news agency and relatives say.
One of those on board called the BBC Somali Service on Thursday night to
say that the boat's generator had failed and their water supplies had
run out.
He said they had left the Libyan capital, Tripoli, hoping to reach the
Italian coast.
The migrants were rescued in a joint Libyan and Italian operation.
Earlier this month, 54 people died of dehydration while trying to sail
from Libya to Italy in an inflatable boat.
Desperate call
The rescued Somali migrants have been returned to Libya, Italy's Ansa
news agency reports.
Relatives of those aboard the boat confirmed to the BBC that they had
been found.
In his call to the BBC's Somalia Service on Thursday, passenger Abdi
Amin Omar said: "We are in a terrible situation."
"We have been floating out to sea now for four days and we don't know
where we are heading or exactly where we are now. All we can see is the
dark sea," he told one of the BBC producers who phoned him back.
"We desperately need help. Some of us are badly injured and there are
several vulnerable pregnant women."
Mr Omar said they had tried to contact the coastguard and were given
another number to call, but that there was no answer on that number.
He warned that the phone's battery was about to run out of power - the
satellite phone line went dead during the conversation.
Hundreds of Somali migrants regularly try to make the dangerous crossing
by sea to seek a better life in Europe.
More than one million Somalis have fled the country since 1991 when Siad
Barre was toppled as president and the country has been wracked by
fighting ever since.
With no central authority for more than 20 years, piracy and lawlessness
have also flourished.
Source: BBC
|
|