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In Lebanon, boat tragedy kills 89 but others still plan to take same perilous journey

It was 24-year-old’s 14th attempt to flee country and it ends with return of his body



Relatives mourn over the body of one of the victims who drowned in the shipwreck.
Image Credit: AFP

NAHR AL BARED, Lebanon: Thousands of Palestinians held prayers on a small soccer field in a refugee camp in northern Lebanon on Saturday, to mourn one of the scores of migrants who died after their boat sank off Syria’s coast this week, even as others vowed to undertake the same perilous voyage.

Abdul Al Abdul Al, 24, kissed his father goodbye on Tuesday before boarding a crowded boat leaving from a nearby town seeking a better life in Europe. It was his 14th attempt to flee the crisis-hit Mediterranean country, this time ending with the return of his dead body. He was to be buried in the camp where he was born, his father, Omar, told The Associated Press during the funeral procession.

The head of Al Basel Hospital in Syria’s coastal city of Tartus said on Saturday that the death toll has reached 89, adding that of the 20 others who were receiving treatment at the medical centre, six were discharged.

The Lebanese army announced on Saturday that troops have detained the man who allegedly organised the deadly trip.

The incident was the deadliest so far as a surging number of Lebanese, Syrians, and Palestinians have been trying to flee Lebanon by sea to Europe in search of jobs and stability. In Lebanon, tens of thousands have lost their jobs while the the national currency has dropped more than 90% in value, eradicating the purchasing power of thousands of families and pulling three-quarters of the population into poverty.

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Members of Syrian Red Crescent work at a shoreline following a migrant boat sank off the Syrian coast after sailing from Lebanon, in Tartus, September 24, 2022.
Image Credit: Reuters

Alongside 1 million Syrian refugees, the small country of Lebanon is home to tens of thousands of Palestinian refugees and their descendants. Many live in the dozen refugee camps that are scattered around the country. Palestinians suffer wide discrimination in Lebanon where they are deprived from doing specific jobs or own property and since the end of the 1975-90 civil war many have migrated.

After noon prayers were held at Nahr Al Bared, hundreds of people gathered in a yard used to play football where Abdul Al’s coffin was placed in the middle. Prayers were held before the body was carried to a nearby cemetery where thousands of people had gathered to witness the young man being laid to rest.

Sometimes he swam back to shore

Omar Abdul Al said that his son had tried to leave Lebanon before but did not succeed as sometimes the migrant boats he took had technical problems or faced high seas. Sometimes he had to swim back to shore, the man said.

“We don’t want to live here anymore. We want to leave,’’ said Omar Abdul Al, adding that he encouraged his late son to leave and now he is encouraging his four other sons to leave Lebanon. He added that his sons are all well educated but they cannot find jobs.

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“We are passing through a severe crisis. There is no medication or bread or anything,’’ the father said. He added that many other Palestinians were planning to go on the boat but it did not fit more people.

Another relative of Abdul Al screamed that “there is a disaster in Nahr Al Bared’’ saying that there are about 30 people missing from the camp who were on the boat. He said people are selling their homes and cars in order to go.

Relatives of two victims who were on a boat carrying migrants from Lebanon that sank in Syrian waters, mourn at their house after they brought back home their bodies.
Image Credit: AP

Several others have been buried since Friday.

There were conflicting reports on how many people were on board the boat when it sank, with some saying at least 120. Details about the ship, such as its size and capacity, were also not clear.

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In the aftermath of the disaster, the Lebanese army said troops stormed Friday the homes of several suspected smugglers, detaining eight people involved in trafficking people abroad.

Residents in northern Lebanon say that people pay about $6,000 for an adult and $3,000 for a child to reach Europe.

At the morgue, Omar Abdul Al said he found his son’s body “intact’’ though it was difficult to identify many of the dozens of other corpses kept there.

“Anyone that comes with a boat, people are ready to go,’’ he said.

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