News update
  • Walton Unveils Bangladesh’s Largest Floating Solar Plant     |     
  • Dreams of July Martyrs remain unfulfilled, claim families     |     
  • Metro Rail Halted on Agargaon–Motijheel Section After Fatal Accident     |     
  • Dhaka’s Per Capita Income Rises to USD 5,163     |     
  • DSE turnover dips 18% despite weekly gains in key indices     |     

Forty Migrants, Including Children, Die in Tunisia Shipwreck

GreenWatch Desk: Migration 2025-10-24, 10:36am

image_2025-10-24_103749433-570070012f5f4a208cca06e76415ecb81761280638.png

Rescued migrants aboard a boat after being saved from a capsized vessel during a perilous sea crossing.



A shipwreck off Tunisia that claimed the lives of at least 40 African migrants has once again highlighted the deadly risks of irregular sea crossings to Europe, the UN migration agency said on Thursday.

The tragedy comes amid concerns that worsening conditions for refugees and asylum-seekers in North Africa are pushing more families to undertake perilous journeys.

The boat, which departed from the Tunisian village of Salakta, capsized shortly after setting off, killing nine women, 19 men, and 12 children under the age of five, according to the UN International Organization for Migration (IOM).

An alert from a nearby fishing vessel led to the rescue of 30 people. Among the survivors were men, women, and children from Cameroon, Côte d’Ivoire, and Guinea.

“This is one of the deadliest maritime incidents recorded along the North African coast this year,” IOM said in a statement.

“It underscores the urgent need for coordinated action to prevent further loss of life along the Central Mediterranean route,” the agency added.

Rising death toll

According to IOM’s Missing Migrants Project, nearly 1,000 deaths and disappearances have already been recorded along the main route this year.

Since 2014, more than 25,000 people have died attempting the crossing from North Africa to Europe, making it the world’s deadliest migration passage. The latest incident brings the total number missing in the wider Mediterranean region to over 32,800.

Children have been among the most affected. At least 30 have lost their lives off Tunisia’s coast this year alone, compared to 22 in all of 2024, IOM said.

Forced by conflict and crises

Tunisia has become an increasingly frequent departure point for people seeking to reach Italy, amid tighter controls and worsening insecurity in neighbouring Libya.

According to the Office of the UN High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR), Tunisia hosts over 10,600 registered refugees and asylum-seekers — 86 per cent of whom come from countries affected by war or widespread violence.

Many are survivors of torture or gender-based violence or are unaccompanied children. Access to essential services has become increasingly limited, heightening protection risks and prompting some to attempt the sea journey.

Ensure safe, regular pathways

The IOM reiterated its support for “protection-sensitive search and rescue operations” and called for the expansion of “safe and regular migration pathways.” It said countries along key migration routes must strengthen coordination and ensure humanitarian principles guide their responses.

Since 2018, interceptions by Tunisian and Libyan coast guards have accounted for nearly half of all recorded search and rescue operations in the Central Mediterranean.

This shift can be attributed to several factors, including the decreased maritime patrol area of Italian authorities and the redeployment of EU border management assets from maritime vessels to drones, which are incapable of conducting rescue operations at sea, the IOM warned.