Up to 1,000 migrants feared lost in Mediterranean after Cyclone Harry
2026-02-02 - 18:45
A grim picture of one of the deadliest migrant disasters in recent Mediterranean history is emerging, with an aid organization reporting that hundreds, potentially up to a thousand people, are feared dead or missing. The Italian NGO Mediterranea Saving Humans issued a stark statement on Monday, citing survivor testimonies and official alerts that suggest multiple boats foundered in the central Mediterranean during Cyclone Harry. The group has sharply criticized Italian and Maltese authorities for a perceived lack of search and rescue response during the extreme weather event. Official alerts and a growing estimate of the missing The scale of the potential tragedy is based on information from Rome's Maritime Rescue Coordination Center. Official alerts transmitted via satellite in late January detailed eight separate search and rescue cases involving boats that departed from the Tunisian coastal city of Sfax between January 14 and 21. These alerts reported at least 380 people missing from the vessels, which carried women and children. As of January 24, none of the boats had been located, and no confirmed rescues were reported. However, testimonies from migrant communities in Tunisia suggest the number of missing could be far higher, with accounts of many more boats that never arrived. A deadly confluence: desperation and a 'medicane' The migrant departures occurred during an exceptionally dangerous meteorological phenomenon. The boats set sail directly into the path of Cyclone Harry, a powerful Mediterranean storm known as a "medicane," which generated waves exceeding seven meters (22 feet) and wind gusts over 54 knots. The NGO described these as "among the most dangerous maritime conditions recorded in the area in the past two decades." Despite these known perils and the issuance of official distress alerts, the aid group states that European maritime authorities have provided no further public communication about rescue efforts or findings since the initial alerts. Testimonies point to a massive loss of life Echoing the fears, first-hand accounts collected in Tunisia paint a devastating picture. Relatives have lost contact with entire boatloads of people. One smuggler is alleged to have dispatched five convoys, each carrying 50 to 55 passengers. Community sources report dozens of vessels departing from various points south of Sfax, many of which have vanished. In a poignant detail, only one boat is known to have reached the Italian island of Lampedusa on January 22, carrying a deceased person onboard, while 1-year-old twins were reported missing at sea. Maltese authorities have reportedly recovered dozens of bodies in recent days. The disaster highlights, yet again, the deadly risks of the Mediterranean crossing and the critical role of Türkiye and other frontline nations in managing migration flows and advocating for humane, coordinated European responses to prevent such catastrophic loss of life.