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Eighty-six bodies have been recovered since a boat carrying migrants from Lebanon sunk off Syria’s coast, state media said Saturday, in one of the deadliest recent such shipwrecks in the eastern Mediterranean.
Search efforts were continuing with several people still missing since the boat sank on Thursday.
At least 20 people rescued were recovering in hospitals in Syria, some in a serious condition, according to the United Nations.
Lebanon, a country which hosts more than a million refugees from Syria’s civil war, has since 2019 been mired in a financial crisis branded by the World Bank as one of the worst in modern times.
It has become a launchpad for illegal migration, with its own citizens joining Syrian and Palestinian refugees clamouring to leave.
More than 450,000 Palestinians are registered in Lebanon with the UN agency for Palestinian refugees, UNRWA.
As many as 150 people were on board the small boat that sank off the Syrian port of Tartus, some 50 kilometres (30 miles) north of Tripoli in Lebanon, from where the migrants set sail.
“No one gets on these death boats lightly,” UNRWA chief Philippe Lazzarini said in a statement. “People are taking this perilous decisions, risking their lives in search of dignity.”
Lazzarini said more must be done “to offer a better future and address a sense of hopelessness in Lebanon and across the region, including among Palestine refugees.”
Since 2020, Lebanon has seen a spike in the number of migrants using its shores to attempt the perilous crossing in jam-packed boats to reach Europe.
Most of the boats setting off from Lebanon head for European Union member Cyprus, an island about 175 kilometres to the west. (AFP)
•PHOTO: Lebanese mourners carry the body of one of the victims of the shipwreck during his funeral in the northern Lebanese port city of Tripoli on September 23, 2022. – At least 77 migrants drowned when a boat they boarded in Lebanon sank off Syria’s coast, Syria’s health minister said Friday, in one of the deadliest such shipwrecks in the eastern Mediterranean. Lebanon, which since 2019 has been mired in a financial crisis branded by the World Bank as one of the worst in modern times, has become a launchpad for illegal migration, with its own citizens joining Syrian and Palestinian refugees clamouring to leave their homeland. Around 150 people, mostly Lebanese and Syrians, were on board the small boat that went down Thursday off the Syrian city of Tartus. (Photo by Fathi AL-MASRI / AFP)