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Evening Standard
Evening Standard
World

Spain finds bodies on shipwrecked migrant boat near the Canary Islands

A Sea-Watch 4 rescue ship sets sails from the port of Burriana, eastern Spain to provide medical care to migrants rescued at sea. It comes as Spanish authorities discovered a boat with around 10 dead migrants on board (Picture: STR/AFP via Getty Images)

Spanish authorities discovered a boat near the Canary Islands with around 10 dead migrants on board.

The shipwreck was spotted by a plane as it searched for a missing boat that had left Mauritania on August 15 with around 40 people on board and was believed to be heading to the Spanish islands off north-west Africa.

Two Spanish Maritime Rescue Service vessels reached the shipwreck about 85 miles south of the island of Gran Canaria.

They were waiting for Guardia Civil police officers to arrive and remove the bodies, providing an exact number of deaths.

The route from western Africa to Spain’s Canary Islands is notoriously dangerous but in recent times has increasingly attracted migrants wanting to reach European soil, as authorities on Mediterranean routes have cracked down on migrant boats.

Since August last year, at least 357 migrants have died trying to reach the Canary Islands, according to the UN migration agency.

So far this year, more than 3,500 migrants have arrived in the archipelago, the Spanish Interior Ministry says.

In the Mediterranean Sea, meanwhile, Spanish authorities on Wednesday reported 99 migrants had been rescued at sea, with another 23 arriving in Mallorca under their own steam.

Additional reporting by PA Media.

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