Boat heading to Canary Islands capsizes, killing at least 49 passengers

3 hours ago 2

Anadolu Agency/Getty Images Lots of wooden fishing boats on a beach in Mauritania - fishing vessels common along the Atlantic coast.Anadolu Agency/Getty Images

Pirogues, traditional wooden fishing canoes, are often used by migrants trying cross the Atlantic to reach Spain's Canary Islands

At least 49 people have died and around another 100 are missing after a boat capsized off the coast of Mauritania, coastguards in the north-west African country have said.

Seventeen people have been rescued and a search is continuing for other passengers aboard the dugout canoe that was heading towards Spain's Canary Islands.

According to survivors, the boat left The Gambia six days before Tuesday's accident, carrying around 160 people on board, mainly Gambian and Senegalese nationals.

The perilous journey over the Atlantic Ocean has become an increasingly common route for African migrants trying to reach Europe.

Nearly 47,000 people reached the Canary Islands last year and the Spanish non-government organisation Caminando Fronteras estimates more than 9,000 migrants died trying.

Coastguard sources told Spanish news agency EFE that search efforts were ongoing off the coast around 60km (37 miles) north of the capital, Nouakchott.

The migrants spotted the lights of a coastal town late on Tuesday night and "moved to one side, causing it to capsize", a senior coastguard official told the AFP news agency.

Spanish media quote Caminando Fronteras spokesperson Helen Maleno as saying she believed around 140 people were missing - and she urged Mauritania's coastguard to keep up the search for them.

She described it as one of the most significant "tragedies of this summer".

Earlier this week, the Mauritanian security forces were accused of systematically abusing migrants from other African countries.

The Human Rights Watch report alleged the violations had been exacerbated by a deal with the European Union and Spain, which aims to curb the dangerous sea crossings to the Canary Islands.

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