Off the wire
2nd LD-Writethru-China Focus: China's manufacturing activity rebounds to nine-month high  • Subaru to recall 78 vehicles in China  • 2 soldiers killed in PKK bomb attack in SE Turkey  • Former Australian ambassador to U.S. warns of Donald Trump presidency  • Myanmar's upper house approves bill on appointing state consultative figure  • UN chief commends China, U.S. joint pledge to sign climate agreement  • S. Korean carmakers' global sales reduce in March on weak overseas demand  • China to levy anti-dumping duties on imports of acrylic fibers, steel  • Interview: China is active player in maintaining world peace, says Mexican expert  • Fiji, Cuba to strengthen ties  
You are here:   Home

27 refugees saved from drifting boat off Cyprus's shores

Xinhua, April 1, 2016 Adjust font size:

Twenty-seven refugees, among them six women and three children, were saved overnight from a drifting Turkish-registered fishing boat off the northwestern coast of Cyprus, authorities said Friday.

Cyprus's Defense Ministry said that the refugees were spotted 14 nautical miles (26 km) off the coast after the vessel sent out a distress signal.

The refugees were taken aboard a police launch to a local tourist resort where they received a medical examination before being transferred to a refugee center near Nicosia. Two women who had suffered hypothermia were taken to a local hospital.

All refugees were Syrians, except one Kurdish family.

Cyprus is the most eastern region of the European Union and lies close to the countries where refugees and migrants originate from, but it is seldom chosen as a stepping stone to Europe as the only means out is by plane.

The refugees said they had paid 2,000 U.S. dollars each to a Turkish trafficker for the 100-nautical-mile trip (185 km) to Cyprus.

After one day at sea, the trafficker left the fishing boat and boarded another vessel which approached, saying he would be back with fuel, the refugees said.

Police said a man from Syria, aged 39, was arrested on suspicion of being an associate of the Turkish trafficker. Endi