NOUAKCHOTT, Mauritania
Coastguards in Mauritania have recovered 89 bodies of migrants from a boat that capsized in the Atlantic Ocean early this week.
Nine people - including a
five-year-old girl - were rescued, but dozens more are missing.
Survivors say the vessel - a
traditional fishing boat - set sail last week from the Senegalese-Gambian
border area with 170 people on board. It capsized off Mauritania's
south-western coast.
Mauritania is a key transit
point for migrants trying to reach Europe from West Africa, with thousands of
boats departing from the country last year.
The most common destination on
the perilous route is Spain's Canary Islands.
The Spanish government says
nearly 40,000 people arrived there last year - double the number from the
previous year.
Desperate to get to Europe,
migrants often travel in overloaded boats.
More than 5,000 migrants died
while trying to reach Spain by sea in the first five months of 2024, the
Ca-minando Fronteras charity estimates.
In April, the EU granted
Mauritania €210m (£177m; $225m) in aid - almost €60m of which will be invested
in the fight against undocumented migration to Europe.
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