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Reuters
Reuters
Environment
Maya Gebeily

Funerals held in Lebanon's Tripoli after migrant shipwreck, dozens still missing

A truck enters port of Tripoli, as the Lebanese army found another body from a migrant shipwreck in the sea off Lebanon's northern coast overnight in Tripoli, Lebanon April 25, 2022. REUTERS/Mohamed Azakir

(Removes extraneous word from lede)

TRIPOLI, Lebanon (Reuters) - The families of migrants who died when their vessel capsized Lebanon's northern coast held funerals in the port city of Tripoli on Monday while rescue efforts continued to find dozens still missing.

Ahmad Tamer, head of Tripoli's port authority attends an interview with Reuters, as the Lebanese army found another body from a migrant shipwreck in the sea off Lebanon's northern coast overnight in Tripoli, Lebanon April 25, 2022. REUTERS/Mohamed Azakir

A dinghy carrying Lebanese, Syrian and Palestinian migrants sank late on Saturday off the coast near Tripoli when naval forces collided with the vessel as the smuggler tried to evade capture.

The United Nations' refugee agency (UNHCR) estimates the dinghy was carrying 80 people at the time it capsized. The authorities say 47 people were rescued, leaving around two dozen unaccounted for.

A seventh body was found on Monday morning, the head of the Tripoli port authority told Reuters.

FILE PHOTO: People stand near stretchers that are prepared for dead bodies after a boat capsized off the Lebanese coast of Tripoli overnight, at port of Tripoli, northern Lebanon April 24, 2022. REUTERS/Omar Ibrahim/

Lebanon's financial meltdown has pushed more than three-quarters of the population into poverty, triggering a wave of migration, including via dangerous sea journeys to Europe on overcrowded dinghies.

In Tripoli's Bab al-Tebbaneh neighbourhood, large crowds gathered for funeral processions of the victims, including a boy and a young man from the Dandachi family who buried their loved ones while desperate to hear the fate of another eight still missing, among them children.

Amid Dandachi, 38, said he and his wife had barely survived the shipwreck. Their children likely hadn't.

"I tried to grab my son but I got a blanket instead. The water took him from me," he told Reuters, his eyes red from crying.

His brother Bilal was also still waiting to know what happened to his two children and wife, whose bodies he suspects are trapped in the sunken dinghy.

In the same neighborhood, another funeral was being held for two more victims of the disaster - a young girl and a woman from the Sammak family. Men on foot and atop motorcycles fired rifles in the air in mourning as they accompanied the bodies to the cemetery.

'TRANSPARENT INVESTIGATION'

In a press conference on Sunday, the army said naval forces had collided with the dinghy as the smuggler in charge tried to evade the military. It previously said the boat had left the coast of Lebanon illegally.

Breaking down into tears, Bilal Dandachi said Lebanon's naval forces had not done enough to rescue those drowning.

"I only have one request from the army command - a transparent investigation. It's the right of my children and the children of my brother and the children of all these people," he said.

In addition to the sunken dinghy, three boats carrying a total of 64 migrants had departed Lebanon this year, of which two were intercepted, according to UNHCR.

(The story refiles to remove extraneous word from lede.)

(Reporting by Maya Gebeily; Editing by Raissa Kasolowsky)

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