Libya says 17 migrants perish at sea, nine missing feared dead


FILE PHOTO: A rubber boat used by migrants floats at the sea on sunset in the Mediterranean, off Libya, August 9, 2025. REUTERS/Louisa Gouliamaki/File Photo

BENGHAZI, April 30 (Reuters) - At ⁠least 17 migrants died and nine are missing after ⁠their boat broke down and drifted for eight days ‌in the Mediterranean Sea, Libya's Red Crescent and Libyan security sources said on Wednesday.

The Red Crescent said in a statement that the volunteers in cooperation ​with naval forces and coast guards ⁠of the Libyan National Army ⁠rescued seven survivors during recovery operations off Tobruk city in eastern ⁠Libya, ‌near the border with Egypt.

Libya is a transit route for migrants, many of them from sub-Saharan Africa, ⁠who risk their lives to flee to Europe ​across desert and ‌sea in the hope of escaping conflict and poverty.

The ⁠security sources ​said they expected the bodies of the nine missing migrants to washashore in the next few days.

Pictures posted on the internet by ⁠the Red Crescent showedthe volunteers placing the ​bodies in black plastic bags and loading them into the back of pick-up vehicles.

On Tuesday, the country's attorney general said Tripoli Criminal ⁠Court sentenced four members of a "criminal gang" in Zuwara, western Libya, to up to 22 years jail for human trafficking, abductions for ransom and torture.

In a separatecase, the Public Prosecutor's Office ​ordered on Monday the arrest of ⁠another gang that allegedly sent migrants from Tobruk on a dilapidated ​boat that capsized, resulting in the ‌death of 38 Sudanese, Egyptian, and ​Ethiopian nationals, according to the attorney general.

(Reporting by Ayman al-Warfalli; writing by Ahmed Elumami; Editing by Stephen Coates)

Follow us on our official WhatsApp channel for breaking news alerts and key updates!

Next In World

Analysis-US court ruling clears Republican path to redraw House districts
Brazil's Senate rejects nomination of Lula's solicitor general for Supreme Court seat
Austria falling short in fight against money laundering, says global watchdog
21 Malagasy workers missing in Mauritius: ministry
Trump says US reviewing possible reduction of its troops in Germany
ELTE Confucius Institute marks 20 years of promoting China-Hungary exchanges
Surveillance drone downed near US embassy in Baghdad, Iraqi security sources say
Roundup: Starmer "deeply concerned" about Golders Green stabbing amid rising antisemitic incidents
Roundup: Europe faces intensifying climate extremes as reports warn of accelerating warming
1st LD: U.S. Fed keeps interest rate unchanged amid high energy prices

Others Also Read