By Borja Suarez
LANZAROTE, Spain (Reuters) – More than 40 African migrants were rescued after their boat ran aground on the rocky coast of Lanzarote in Spain’s Canary Islands late on Thursday, emergency services said, while over 100 people on two more boats made it safely to other islands.
At least three people died and at least two more were missing, including a six-year old girl. Rescue workers with a helicopter were searching the coast around Lanzarote’s northern region of Muelle de Orzola for them on Friday morning.
Local resident Marcos Lemes, who was first on the scene and alerted emergency services, told Reuters he had begun pulling people out of the water after giving his phone to a boy to use as a torch.
“I ran out of the house with two buoys that I keep at home and when I got there it was madness … I saw a huge number of people on the reef.”
A dozen of the rescued group, including two babies and two young children, were transferred to hospital, the regional emergency services said.
Another boat carrying 58 people made it to Fuerteventura and a third with 52 people landed on the tiny island of El Hierro.
So far this year more than 5,700 migrants have made the dangerous crossing from Africa to the Canaries archipelago, over twice as many as in the same period in 2020, which itself saw an eightfold increase from 2019.
A record 850 died on the route last year, according to the United Nations migration agency, which suggested COVID-19 had prompted many workers in struggling industries like fishing or agriculture to migrate.
With arrival facilities on the Canaries packed to capacity, authorities have housed of migrants thousands in camps where conditions have criticised by rights groups.
(Reporting by Borja Suarez; Additional reporting and writing by Nathan Allen, editing by Andrei Khalip and Catherine Evans)