At least 17 migrants, including one boy, have died, while dozens more are missing, after two boats sank in Greek waters on Thursday.
Authorities in Greece said on Thursday that they had recovered 17 bodies close to the eastern island of Lesbos after a dinghy that left the Turkish coast carrying about 40 people ran into trouble amid high winds. Ten women were rescued and around a dozen people were presumed missing.
Greek Migration Minister Notis Mittarachi took to Twitter following the incident to call on Turkey to take “immediate action to prevent all irregular departures due to harsh weather conditions.”
‘We Could See The Boat Smashing Against The Rocks’
Turkish officials have previously denied claims that authorities have pushed migrants back to Greece. In a statement issued on Oct. 4, the Turkish coastguard command said the migrants involved in the latest incidents had been “pushed back to Turkish territorial waters by Greek assets.”In a separate incident on Wednesday, Greek authorities rescued 80 migrants, of which 18 were minors, after a boat smashed into rocks and sank near the southern Greek island of Kythira amid stormy weather, officials said.
According to those rescued, 15 were still missing. Officials have launched a search-and-rescue operation along the wider coast of Lesbos to find migrants who may have made it to shore. Three were found trapped in a remote area.
Kythira is roughly 400 kilometers (250 miles) west of Turkey and located on a route that is often used by smugglers seeking to avoid waters around Greece, which are heavily patrolled, and head straight to Italy.
Greece saw a wave of refugees enter the country between 2015 and 2016, when around a million fleeing war and poverty in Syria, Iraq, and Afghanistan arrived, mostly via Turkey.