DAKAR, Senegal
At least 30 decomposing bodies have been found on a boat off the coast of Senegal, military authorities say.
The navy was informed of a
vessel that was adrift about 70km (45 miles) from the capital Dakar, according
to a military statement on X. They brought the wooden canoe, or pirogue, into
port on Monday morning.
"Recovery, identification
and transfer operations are being made extremely delicate by the advanced state
of decomposition of the bodies," the statement said.
There has been a recent
increase in migrants setting off from Senegal for Spain's Canary Islands - a
journey of more than 1,500km (950 miles) across the Atlantic Ocean.
Given how decomposed the
bodies were, the migrants were probably adrift on the Atlantic Ocean for many
days before fishermen found them.
Investigations are underway to
determine when and where the boat departed, and how many people were on board,
the army said.
In August, at least
14 decomposing bodies, believed to have been Senegalese migrants, were found
off the coast of the Dominican Republic by a local fisherman.
Senegal's government announced
a 10-year plan in August to tackle illegal migration amid a surge in
migrant-related deaths.
The authorities have
intercepted hundreds of migrants on boats off the country's coast in recent
weeks.
Despite frequent tragedies,
unemployment, conflict and poverty drive young men to risk the route from West
Africa to Spain's Canary Islands.
Some Senegalese fishermen say
they can't survive by fishing any longer because of the presence of foreign
trawlers off the coast, so they turn to either migration, or offering their
boats to be used by people smugglers.
Young West African migrants
have been increasingly using the Canary Islands route to reach Europe because
it involves a single, albeit dangerous, journey rather than needing to cross
both the Sahara Desert and the Mediterranean Sea.
Frontex, the European border
agency, reported that in 2023 the Atlantic route saw a 161% increase compared
to the previous year.
The UN says about 40,000
migrants made it to the Canary Islands last year.
Nearly 1,000 are known to have
died or disappeared on the way. Although the real number is likely to be far
higher.
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