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The New Daily
The New Daily
World
Lefteris Karagiannopoulos and Terje Solsvik

Hundreds missing after asylum seekers’ boat goes down in the Mediterranean

Brothers Fadi and Mohammad erupt in joy after finding each other amongst survivors of the horrific sinking. Photo: AP

A Syrian teenager who survived a shipwreck that killed at least 78 people has been emotionally reunited with his elder brother, but there has been no news for other relatives gathering in the southern Greek city of Kalamata to search for loved ones.

Witness accounts suggested between 400 and 750 people had packed the 20- to 30-metre-long fishing boat that capsized and sank early on Wednesday morning about 80kms from the southern coastal town of Pylos.

In the immediate aftermath of the disaster, 104 survivors and the bodies of 78 who drowned were brought ashore by Greek authorities, but nothing has been found since.

A massive search and rescue operation continued on Friday but hopes were dwindling of finding any more survivors from the hundreds of people believed to have been on board the boat when it sank in some of the deepest waters of the Mediterranean.

Early on Friday, survivor Mohammad, 18, from Syria, burst into sobs as he spotted his elder brother Fadi, who travelled from the Netherlands searching for him.

Joy amid the tears

They wept and hugged through metal barricades, erected by Greek police around a warehouse in Kalamata, where survivors had been sleeping for the past two days.

“Thank God for your safety,” Fadi said, repeatedly kissing his younger sibling on the head.

About 25 other relatives gathered outside hoping for news, clasping screenshots of their loved ones on mobile phones.

The ageing fishing vessel was thought to have departed from Egypt and then picked up passengers in the Libyan coastal city of Tobruk on June 10.

Survivors who spoke to Greek authorities said they paid $US4500 ($A6500) each to go to Italy.

The exact circumstances of the vessel sinking while it was being shadowed by the Greek Coast Guard are still unclear.

Authorities, who were alerted by Italy on Tuesday and subsequently monitored the vessel across a period of 15 hours before it sank, say occupants on the vessel repeatedly refused Greek help, saying they wanted to go to Italy.

Quest for answers

An advocacy group that had been in communication with the vessel said that on at least two occasions persons on board pleaded for help.

The group, Alarm Phone, said it had alerted Greek authorities and aid agencies hours before the disaster unfolded.

Greek authorities denied accounts that surfaced late on Thursday that the boat flipped after the Coast Guard attempted to tow it.

“There was no effort to tug the boat,” spokesman Nikos Alexiou told state broadcaster ERT.

Nine people, most of them from Egypt, were arrested over the shipwreck on Thursday evening.

Authorities said they faced charges of negligent manslaughter, exposing lives to danger, causing a shipwreck and human trafficking.

Survivors were transferred by bus to a migrant camp in Malakasa, near Athens, on Friday.

Under a conservative government in power until last month, Greece took a tough stance on migration, building walled camps and boosting border controls.

The country is currently governed by a caretaker administration pending an election on June 25.

-AAP

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