Several migrants have died and others have been injured when their boat capsized off Calais in the English Channel as they tried to cross from France to Britain, according to French officials.
Three French patrol boats and a French helicopter and a British helicopter were searching the area for other victims late on Wednesday (early Thursday morning AEDT), according to the French maritime agency for the region.
A French naval boat spotted several bodies in the water and retrieved an unidentified number of dead and multiple injured, including some who were unconscious, a maritime authority spokesperson said.
Franck Dhersin, a vice president for the surrounding region, tweeted that 24 dead bodies were pulled from the water after a boat carrying about 50 migrants had sunk. But he didn't provide a source, and maritime authorities and local police said the total number of dead remains unclear.
While deaths are occasionally reported on the crossing, such a large number of people losing their lives in one boat would be exceptional.
"Strong emotion after the drama of numerous dead in the sinking of a boat of migrants in the Channel," Interior Minister Gerald Darmanin tweeted. He slammed migrant trafficking networks who organise such journeys and headed to a Calais hospital to see the victims.
The nationalities of the victims weren't immediately released.
The number of migrants using small boats to cross the Channel has grown sharply this year, despite the high risks that are worsening in autumn weather.
The waterway with changeable weather, cold seas and heavy maritime traffic is dangerous for the inflatables and other small boats that men, women and children squeeze into for attempted crossings.
French and British authorities have picked up thousands of migrants off both the French and British coasts in recent weeks in scores of rescue operations. Deaths occasionally occur, but are rare.
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November 24, 2021 at 11:24PM
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Several migrants have died and others have been injured when their boat capsized off Calais in the English Channel as they tried to cross from France to Britain, according to French officials.
Three French patrol boats and a French helicopter and a British helicopter were searching the area for other victims late on Wednesday (early Thursday morning AEDT), according to the French maritime agency for the region.
A French naval boat spotted several bodies in the water and retrieved an unidentified number of dead and multiple injured, including some who were unconscious, a maritime authority spokesperson said.
Franck Dhersin, a vice president for the surrounding region, tweeted that 24 dead bodies were pulled from the water after a boat carrying about 50 migrants had sunk. But he didn't provide a source, and maritime authorities and local police said the total number of dead remains unclear.
While deaths are occasionally reported on the crossing, such a large number of people losing their lives in one boat would be exceptional.
"Strong emotion after the drama of numerous dead in the sinking of a boat of migrants in the Channel," Interior Minister Gerald Darmanin tweeted. He slammed migrant trafficking networks who organise such journeys and headed to a Calais hospital to see the victims.
The nationalities of the victims weren't immediately released.
The number of migrants using small boats to cross the Channel has grown sharply this year, despite the high risks that are worsening in autumn weather.
The waterway with changeable weather, cold seas and heavy maritime traffic is dangerous for the inflatables and other small boats that men, women and children squeeze into for attempted crossings.
French and British authorities have picked up thousands of migrants off both the French and British coasts in recent weeks in scores of rescue operations. Deaths occasionally occur, but are rare.