Horror at sea: 130 migrants drown in Mediterranean after rubber boat heading to Europe capsizes off the coast of Libya

More than 100 migrants are feared to have drowned in the Mediterranean after their rubber boat heading to Europe capsized off the coast of Libya.
Independent rescue groups said 130
people are now feared dead in the latest loss of life for migrants attempting
to cross the sea.
Humanitarian organisations have
accused the Libyan coast guard and European authorities of failing to meet
their responsibilities to save lives.
A Libyan coast guard official
today said that they searched for the boat but could not find it with their
limited resources.
SOS Mediterranee, which operates
the rescue vessel Ocean Viking, said their ship did not find any survivors at
the wreckage site, but could see at least ten bodies nearby.
The organisation said late on
Thursday that the capsized rubber boat - which was initially carrying around
130 people - was spotted in the Mediterranean Sea northeast of the Libyan
capital, Tripoli.
'Today, after hours of search, our worst fear
has come true,' said Louisa Alberta, Search and Rescue Coordinator on board the
rescue vessel. 'The crew of the Ocean Viking had to witness the devastating
aftermath of the shipwreck of a rubber boat north east of Tripoli.
'We think of the lives that have been lost and
of the families who might never have certainty as to what happened to their
loved ones.'
The migrant traffic has raised the
question among European Union countries and Libya over who is responsible for
saving those at sea.
The European humanitarian
organisation said that those missing will likely join the 350 people who have
drowned in the sea so far this year. It accused governments of failing to
provide search and rescue operations.
In the years since the 2011
NATO-backed uprising that ousted and killed longtime dictator Muammar Gaddafi,
war-torn Libya has emerged as the dominant transit point for migrants fleeing
war and poverty in Africa and the Middle East.
Smugglers often pack desperate
families into ill-equipped rubber boats that stall and founder along the
perilous Central Mediterranean route.
'These are the human consequences of policies
which fail to uphold international law and the most basic of humanitarian
imperatives,' tweeted Eugenio Ambrosi, Chief of Staff for the International
Organization for Migration.
Alarm Phone, a crisis hotline for
migrants in distress in the Mediterranean, said that it had been in contact
with the boat in distress for nearly ten hours before it capsized.
The organisation said in a
statement that it had notified European and Libyan authorities of the GPS
position of the boat but only non-state rescue groups actively searched for it.
Alarm Phone accused European
authorities of refusing to coordinate a search operation, leaving it solely in
the hands of the Libyan Coast Guard.
Libya Coast Guard spokesman
Commander Masoud Ibrahim Masoud labelled allegations that they had been
negligent as untrue.
'We coordinated the search operation,' he said.
'The ships kept searching in the sea for more than 24 hours but the waves were
very rough.'
Masoud said that the Libyan coast
guard had received around noon on Wednesday two rescue alerts from two
different rubber boats in distress to the east of Tripoli.
A patrol vessel was immediately
dispatched and rescued 106 migrants, including women and children, who were
aboard one of the two boats.
Two bodies were also pulled out of
the water near the capsized boat. He said the same vessel continued to search,
but visibility was low and seas rough.
He said the vessel eventually
returned to port so that the other migrants onboard could receive medical
attention.
In the meantime, he said Libyan
authorities asked three merchant ships and Ocean Viking to look for the missing
rubber boat, until the Libyan patrol vessel could join them again.
In recent years, the European
Union has partnered with Libya's coast guard and other local groups to stem
such dangerous sea crossings. Rights groups, however, say those policies leave
migrants at the mercy of armed groups or confined in squalid detention centers
rife with abuses.
'We are not as equipped as the US coast guard
and the support we get from the EU does not meet our needs,' said Masoud.
Thousands of migrants attempting
to cross the Mediterranean have died, the UN migration agency reports.
At least 41 people drowned when
their boat capsized in February this year in the Mediterranean see after
fleeing Libya, the IOM said.
Last year in November, a mother
was filmed crying out for her six-month-old son after being hauled onto a
rescue ship after a dinghy capsized in the Mediterranean.
'Did you see my baby? I lose my baby! Why me?
Where is my baby?' The woman from Guinea shrieks in the harrowing footage.
Her baby, Joseph, was eventually
hauled from the waves by Spanish rescuers but died aboard their ship of
respiratory arrest.
The infant was among five migrants
who perished after an inflatable dinghy laden with 116 people sank after
setting sail from Libya.
The vessel started to deflate
within three hours of leaving the port city of Sabratah.