Death toll in Egypt boat capsize now 162

The death toll from a capsized boat off the coast of Egypt has risen to at least 162.

Egyptian rescue workers arrive on a boat carrying bodies of migrants, during a search operation after a boat carrying migrants capsized in the Mediterranean

Egyptian rescue workers arrive on a boat carrying bodies of migrants, during a search operation after a boat carrying migrants capsized in the Mediterranean Source: Getty

More than 150 bodies have been found after a boat carrying hundreds of migrants capsized off an Egyptian coastal town this week, a provincial official says.

Eighteen more bodies were retrieved Friday afternoon, bringing the number of victims to 162, the governor of the Delta Beheira province, Mohamed Sultan, said on Friday.

A total of 164 people have been rescued since the boat sank on Wednesday off Beheira's town of Rosetta, Sultan said, according to privately owned newspaper al-Masri al-Youm.

He did not provide a breakdown of the survivors' nationalities.

State-run newspaper al-Ahram said online that those rescued were 121 Egyptians, including four crew members, and 43 foreign migrants.

There are many children and women among the victims, al-Ahram reported.

Search operations were ongoing on Friday but no further survivors were reported found that day.

On Thursday, Egyptian authorities jailed the four crew members pending an inquiry into the accident, among the deadliest of its kind in recent years.

Reports gave conflicting figures for the exact number of people who were on board the boat when it sank early on Wednesday.

Al-Ahram gave an estimate of 400, while private newspaper al-Shorouk said the vessel was carrying at least 300 people.

One survivor said there were more than 500 people on board the boat when it sank.

"The boat flipped over and sank shortly after the start of the journey," Ahmed Darwish, told al-Masri al-Youm.

The 25-year-old Egyptian said he was rescued after swimming for around nine hours.

"Hard circumstances of life and my failure to get a job prompted me to go on the journey," he told the newspaper.

Among those on board were people from Egypt, Syria, Sudan, Somalia and Eritrea, al-Shorouk reported.

Initial investigations found that the boat had been filled beyond capacity, Egyptian media reported.

In recent years, Egypt has seen an increase in migrants trying to travel across the Mediterranean Sea to Europe. Regional turmoil and high unemployment rates are believed to be the main driving factors behind the risky journeys.


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Source: AAP



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