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ATHENS, Greece: Greece’s coast guard said Wednesday it was continuing a broad overnight search and rescue operation after a yacht smuggling migrants partially sank in the eastern Aegean.
A total of 96 people were rescued from the sea 21 nautical miles (31 kilometers, 24 miles) west of the small island of Halki, near Rhodes, the coast guard said. As the total number of people who had been on board was not known, the search and rescue operation continued into Wednesday afternoon.
The coast guard described the effort as one of the largest and most successful search and rescue operations to have taken place in the Aegean Sea, noting that it took place mainly at night and that many of those rescued, including many children, had not been wearing life jackets.
Of those rescued, 72 were transported to Rhodes, five to the island of Karpathos and 19 were picked up from a cargo ship by the Turkish coast guard. Those taken to the Greek islands were being given coronavirus tests and were being housed in quarantine hotels.
The Greek coast guard was alerted after a passenger on board the yacht made an emergency call late Tuesday.
Authorities scrambled helicopters, naval and coast guard vessels, and several passing merchant ships also participated in the operation.
But Greece’s coast guard said its rescue efforts were hampered by the Turkish coast guard. The incident comes during a crisis in Greek-Turkish relations, with the two neighbors in an acrimonious dispute over maritime exploration rights in the eastern Mediterranean.
The coast guard said in a statement that two Turkish patrol vessels arrived in the search and rescue area during the overnight operation, after a large number of people had already been rescued.
The coast guard said the Turkish patrol vessels did not notify the rescue operation coordinator about their presence, and made no essential contribution to the effort
Also, they were constantly calling on the nearby ships in the area to depart, it said, adding that the Turkish patrol boats took 19 of the rescued migrants off a Maltese-flagged, Turkish-owned cargo ship that had picked them up, thereby hampering efforts to account for the number of rescued and determine whether there were people missing.
There was no immediate response from the Turkish coast guard to the accusations.
Thousands of people continue to make their way clandestinely to the Greek islands from the nearby Turkish coast, paying smugglers to ferry them in often unseaworthy, overcrowded inflatable dinghies or other vessels.
The coast guard said smuggling gangs have recently begun using larger vessels, mainly sailboats and yachts, to ferry migrants from the Turkish coast directly to southern Italy. Such a route would mean the migrants would bypass Greece, where thousands languish in overcrowded camps instead of being able to head to their intended destination, usually more prosperous European countries further north.
At least 25 such incidents have occurred in the last three months, the coast guard said, adding that they had been handled by the Greek and the Italian coast guards.
Turkish authorities have been repeatedly informed about this particular phenomenon, without any response, it said.
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