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Migrant shipwreck survivor is arrested in Italy amid claims he strangled Iraqi girl, 16, to death in front of her mother on sinking yacht in the Med after watching his wife and daughter drown

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A survivor of a migrant shipwreck that left dozens of people dead has been arrested on suspicion of murdering a teenage Iraqi girl on board.

In a statement, officers said the sailing boat was adrift off Italy when the man ‘vented his aggression on a 16-year-old Iraqi girl, the daughter of another survivor, leading to her death by suffocation’.

According to Italian daily newspaper Corriere della Sera, the 27-year-old migrant strangled the girl in front of her distraught mother while on board the sinking yacht.

Twelve people were rescued from the ship, which police say is believed to have been carrying around 70 people, as it was revealed more than half have been found dead.

The ship originated in Turkey and was wrecked about 120 nautical miles off the southern coast of Italy.

One of the 12 survivors of a migrant shipwreck that left dozens of people dead has been arrested on suspicion of murdering a teenage Iraqi girl on board

Rescuers said the sail ship was carrying around 70 people, while 12 were rescued and taken ashore by the Italian coastguard. One of those rescued died soon after

Rescuers said the sail ship was carrying around 70 people, while 12 were rescued and taken ashore by the Italian coastguard. One of those rescued died soon after

The survivors were brought to the port of Roccella Ionica on June 17. However a female survivor later died.

Another 35 bodies were subsequently recovered from the water in search efforts, local authorities said on Tuesday, bringing the toll of those who died to 36.

The bodies found at sea included 15 minors.

The UN refugee agency UNHCR, the International Organisation for Migration and UN children’s agency UNICEF said the migrants came from Iran, Syria and Iraq.

The survivor accused of murder has been detained in prison in Catanzaro, the capital of the Calabria region, police said.

Security forces in Iraq’s Kurdistan on Tuesday announced the arrest of four suspected human traffickers over the shipwreck.

According to non-governmental organisations and accounts from victims’ families, the sailing boat was carrying mostly Kurdish migrants from Iraq and Iran, along with Afghan families.

The UN’s International Organization for Migration says about 3,155 migrants died or went missing in the Mediterranean last year and more than 1,000 people so far this year.

The Central Mediterranean migration route, on which Italy lies, is the deadliest in the world and accounts for 80 percent of the deaths on that sea.

Thousands of migrants depart from Libya and Tunisia by boat towards Europe, with Italy often the first landing point.

Many migrants from African nations embark on the trips from ports in Libya – where human traffickers have capitalised on the country’s instability.

Those from the Middle East often attempt to make the shorter but no less perilous journey west across the Mediterranean from Turkey, having arrived there from Iraq, Iran, Syria, Pakistan and Afghanistan. 

Turkey in 2016 inked a deal with the EU to stop migrants and refugees crossing into Greece in return for some €6billion – later increased to €9billion – to provide infrastructure and humanitarian aid to the migrants it accepted.

Under the deal, Turkish authorities would prevent migrants from trying to reach Greece and accept the return of those who did.

For every migrant Turkey took back from Greece, the EU would allow one Syrian refugee in Turkey who had their asylum request approved to be permitted entry into an EU state. 

But in 2020 Ankara said the deal could no longer be enforced and began refusing to accept returns from Greece – a factor which may have contributed to the Greek coastguard’s alleged actions that resulted in migrant deaths. 

Coast guard officers recover the bodies of migrants following the tragic shipwreck off Italy

Coast guard officers recover the bodies of migrants following the tragic shipwreck off Italy

Earlier this month, Greece denied the findings of the BBC report that accused its coast guard of brutally preventing migrants from reaching Greek shores and alleged the practice had resulted in dozens of deaths.

Greek government spokesman Pavlos Marinakis insisted that there was no evidence to support the allegations.

‘Our understanding is that what is reported is not proved,’ he told a regular press briefing when asked about the claims. 

‘Every complaint is looked into, and in the end, the relevant findings are made public.’

According to UN data, more than 23,500 migrants have died or gone missing in Mediterranean waters since 2014.

UN agencies called on EU governments to step up Mediterranean search and rescue efforts and expand legal and safe migration channels, so that migrants ‘are not forced to risk their lives at sea’.

Earlier this month 11 bodies were recovered from the sea off the coast of Libya, while last year another migrant boat that had set off from Turkey smashed into rocks just off the town of Cutro in Calabria, killing at least 94 people.

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