At least 75 people drowned after a large fishing boat carrying migrants sank early Wednesday in the Aegean Sea, the Greek Shipping Ministry said, in what appeared to be one of the deadliest such episodes off the country’s coast in years.
More than 100 people have been rescued, but the Greek Coast Guard warned that the death toll would probably increase.
The boat foundered about 50 miles southwest of the city of Pylos, in southern Greece, after the authorities were alerted to its unusual movements on Tuesday, according to a statement from the Greek Coast Guard released early that day.
A Greek Shipping Ministry official said that the boat had refused assistance offered by the authorities. He also said that cargo ships in the area had given the migrants food and water.
The cause of the sinking was unclear as of Wednesday afternoon.
The Greek authorities said that a large number of vessels had been deployed by the coast guard and the military in a “wide-ranging search and rescue operation” to recover the survivors and locate the dead, many of whom were said to be migrants from Egypt, Pakistan and Syria.
It was unclear how many people were still missing, but interviews with survivors were expected to shed more light on the scale of the tragedy.
President Katerina Sakellaropoulou was reportedly on her way to the port of Kalamata, in southwestern Greece, where the local authorities have established an open-air clinic to provide first aid to survivors.