FYI.

This story is over 5 years old.

News

The Bodies of Six Drowned Children Have Been Found Off Turkey

Turkish officials reportedly found the bodies of six children, including a baby, on Tuesday after a migrant boat heading for Greece capsized. It was not immediately clear how many people were on board.
Refugees arrive in Greece in October. Photo by Zoltan Balogh/EPA

VICE News is closely watching the international migrant crisis. Check out the Open Water blog here.

At least six children died and eight other people were rescued on Tuesday after a boat carrying migrants bound for Greece capsized off Turkey's western coast near the city of Izmir.

Responding to a distress signal sent at midnight local time on Monday, the Turkish coastguard extended a search operation into Tuesday's daylight hours, Dogan News Agency reported.

Advertisement

Related: Beaten, Robbed, Set Upon by Dogs: Welcome to Europe

State-run Anadolu Agency said the coastguard found the bodies of six children including a baby, adding that the migrants on the boat were Afghans. It was not immediately clear how many people in all were on board.

A record 500,000 refugees from a four-year-old civil war in Syria have traveled through Turkey then risked their lives in rickety boats to reach nearby Greek islands this year, their first stop in the European Union (EU) before continuing to wealthier countries in the north and west of the continent.

Nearly 600 people have died this year on the so-called eastern Mediterranean sea route for migrants, according to the International Organization for Migration.

More than half a million migrants have streamed this year into Greece, which has become the front line of a massive westward population shift from war-ravaged Syria and conflict- or deprivation-plagued countries beyond.

Turkey struck a deal with the EU on November 29 pledging to help stem the flow of migrants into Europe in return for 3 billion euros of cash for the 2.2 million Syrians the country has been hosting, visas, and renewed talks on joining the 28-nation bloc.

Related: Canada Welcomes Family of Drowned Syrian Boy Alan Kurdi