Tunisia recovers more migrant bodies after deadly shipwreck
Tunisian authorities said last week that over 14,000 migrants and asylum seekers were intercepted trying to reach Europe from January to March, more than five times the number of those who attempted the trip in the first quarter of 2022.
Tunisia has recovered 14 bodies of migrants from sub-Saharan Africa in the Mediterranean, bringing to 24 the number of dead after their boat headed for Europe sank.
The coastguard said on Thursday that 14 more bodies of migrants were discovered, including six women, during search operations, as well as the body of the boat's Tunisian captain.
It also announced on Wednesday that it had recovered 10 bodies of sub-Saharan African migrants after the shipwreck the day before off the coastal city of Sfax.
Faouzi Masmoudi, the spokesman for the court of Sfax which is investigating the tragedy, said that the 15 bodies had been trapped under the boat.
The spokesman for the National Guard also announced Thursday that 41 Tunisian migrants and asylum seekers, including five women and nine children, had been "rescued" off the coast of Sousse.
READ MORE: Several irregular migrants from sub-Saharan Africa drown off Tunisia coast
World's deadliest migration route
Dozens of migrants and asylum seekers, mostly from sub-Saharan Africa, have drowned off Tunisia in recent weeks in desperate attempts to reach Europe.
The country, whose coastline is less than 150 kilometres from the Italian island of Lampedusa, has long been a favoured spot for irregular migrants attempting the journey.
Departures of migrants from sub-Saharan Africa intensified after Tunisian President Kais Saied gave an incendiary speech in February accusing "hordes" of irregular immigrants of causing a crime wave and being part of a "plot" to change Tunisia's demographic make-up.
The comments led to a wave of evictions and violence against Black migrants.
The United Nations' Human Rights chief Volker Turk voiced alarm on Thursday over the "precarious" situation of asylum-seekers and migrants attempting to cross the Central Mediterranean, the world's deadliest migration route.
"We are seeing a steep increase in the number of desperate people putting their lives at grave risk," he said in a statement.
"We cannot afford to dither, and to become embroiled in yet another debate about who is responsible. Human lives are at stake."
Tunisia's coastguard said last week it had intercepted over 14,000 migrants and asylum seekers trying to reach Europe from January to March, more than five times the number of those who attempted the trip in the first quarter of 2022.
Since 2014 over 26,000 people have died or gone missing crossing the Mediterranean, including over 20,000 along the Central Mediterranean route alone, according to the UN.
READ MORE: Twenty African migrants missing after boat sinks off Tunisia