Watchdog urges EU rescue rules change after migrant boat disaster off Greece
Ombudsman says papers show EU agency made four offers to help Greece with surveillance of boat that sank, but got no response
The rules governing the EU's border and coastguard agency Frontex must be urgently revised if Europe is to avoid a repeat of last year's tragedy off the coast of Greece in which about 600 people are thought to have died, an official investigation has found.
In one of the worst disasters in the Mediterranean sea in recent years, the Adriana, a dangerously overcrowded fishing trawler en route to Italy from Libya, capsized and sank in the middle of the night near Pylos on 14 June. Only 104 survivors were rescued and 82 bodies recovered after the ship, estimated to have been carrying more than 750 people, sank off the Peloponnese.
Continue reading...