UN launches rescue operation after eight die off Djibouti coast; 22 missing
In a statement, IOM said the dead and missing were part of a group of 150 others who were forced by smugglers to get off a boat and swim to shore last week on June 5.
The surviving refugees and migrants were reportedly found in the desert by IOM patrol teams and taken to a response centre.
The IOM and Djibouti authorities are continuing with a search-and-rescue operation to find the missing.
'Every life lost at sea is a tragedy that should never happen,' said Frantz Celestin, IOM Regional Director for the East, Horn and Southern Africa.
Celestin added that those on the boat were 'forced into impossible choices by smugglers who show no regard for human life'.
Thousands of refugees and migrants from African, Middle Eastern and South Asian countries, fleeing conflict, persecution, or seeking a better life in Europe, attempt perilous crossings by sea every year.
Smugglers prey upon them, packing often flimsy vessels full of desperate passengers, risking their lives to reach Europe.
Most of the vessels get people across the Red Sea to Gulf countries before many try and travel on to European nations.
Yemen is a key route for those from East Africa and the Horn of Africa who are trying to reach Gulf countries to work. Hundreds of thousands attempt the journey each year.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


New York Post
2 hours ago
- New York Post
Fresh Russian strikes kill 5, wound dozens in Ukraine as Putin rebels against Trump's ‘severe' sanctions threat
Russia launched further brutal drone attacks on Ukraine overnight Monday, wounding a 14-year-old girl and 'deliberately' targeting a university in a stunning act of rebellion against President Trump's threats of fresh sanctions and weapons deliveries to Ukraine. Five were killed and at least 43 injured, including four children, in attacks across Ukraine, the Kyiv Independent reported, citing regional authorities.. A 14-year-old girl, a university student, 19, and five members of staff were among the dozen injured during attacks on the northeastern city of Sumy. Separate attacks struck Dnipropetrovsk, Donetsk, Kharkiv, Kherson and Zaporizhzhia Oblast, according to the Kyiv Independent. 4 Russia launched fresh air strikes on Ukraine overnight, defying Trump's threats of new sanctions. AP Russia claimed that it had targeted Ukrainian military-industrial facilities on Monday, however, several residential buildings and medical sites were also hit with drone strikes, EuroNews reported. The deadly strikes came hours after Trump and NATO chief Mark Rutte announced further Ukraine arms deliveries on Monday, manufactured in the US and paid for by European members of the alliance. Trump also handed Putin a 50-day ultimatum to reach a peace deal or face 'very severe' economic sanctions. 4 Trump gave Putin 50 days to come up with a peace deal. AFP via Getty Images 'Putin's rationale behind conducting strikes only a few hours after President Trump's announcement of weapons sales to Europe is rooted in his commitment to continuing the war in Ukraine,' Angelica Evans, Russia analyst for Washington, DC-based think-tank the Institute for the Study of War, told The Post. 'The Russians are trying to project confidence in their ability to weather sanctions and keep advancing forward in Ukraine, and last night's strikes are another example of Putin's intransigence,' she added. 4 The Post's front page on Tuesday. Russia is making a summer push to break through the 600-mile frontline, stepping up its bombardment on Ukrainian cities to its highest level since the start of the war almost three and a half years ago. Putin's allies suggest he will use the September deadline to try and blitz his way through as much of Ukraine as he can, to strengthen his hand in future negotiations. 4 Five were killed and dozens wounded in Russian drone strikes across Ukraine. AP 'Oh, how much can change both on the battlefield and with the mood of those leading the US and NATO in 50 days,' senior Russian lawmaker Konstantin Kosachev said on social media, according to EuroNews. Evans warned that the chances of a peace deal being achieved in 50 days are highly unlikely. 'Putin is looking at the next 50 days the same way he's looked at the last six months — an opportunity to keep pushing along the frontline and striking Ukrainian cities while pretending to be interested in peace,' she said. 'It's highly unlikely we'll get a peace deal in 50 days solely because Putin still isn't interested in one. Until the West agrees to more significant sanctions that bring serious costs on the Russian economy and Ukrainian forces start taking territory back — a serious political and military cost for Putin — I don't think we'll see any movement on peace.' However, she said a fresh round of secondary sanctions affecting Russia and China could have an impact. 'If the Trump administration goes through with this plan, countries like China and India could start feeling the pressure and reflecting some of that back in their relations with Russia,' Evans said. 'Putin will try and convince Trump to abandon secondary sanctions because this could threaten Russia's ability to finance and continue the war if properly enforced. We know that Russia is relying on sanctions evasion and ongoing oil purchases from some of its allies to fund and supply this war, and secondary sanctions are a way to get at these channels.'


Chicago Tribune
4 hours ago
- Chicago Tribune
Niles grocery store raising money for family of employee killed in suspected DUI collision
Owners of a local grocery story are expressing their condolences for the death of one of their employees by hosting online and in-store fundraisers for her and the woman's surviving family members. Bogdana Mygal, 33, of Des Plaines, was pronounced dead July 5 at Advocate Condell Medical Center in Libertyville after being transported there following a multi-vehicle collision in a Lake County suburb. A man is facing driving under the influence charges in connection with the fatal incident that also saw Mygal's husband and 4-year-old daughter sustain injuries. 'She came from the Ukraine with her husband and no other family. They came here to have a better life. She wanted the best for her and her family. Her daughter was her world. It just breaks my heart,' Joanna Antonik, co-owner of Deli 4 You Market, told Pioneer Press by phone. Deli 4 You Market, a full-line Polish and European grocery store chain, has five Chicagoland locations, including in Norridge and Niles – the latter is where Mygal worked for three years before her death. Antonik owns the stores with her mother, Margaret. 'We always enjoyed working with her. She was extremely liked, super nice to customers, co-workers, and so helpful. She was a wonderful person,' said Antonik. The Niles store has set up a memorial at the cash register where Mygal usually worked. Also at the check out lane is a jar where people can deposit cash as part of a fundraiser. An online fundraiser is running on the GoFundMe website where, as of Tuesday, more than $54,000 has been raised. The initial goal was $50,000 but is now changed to $70,000. Antonik said she and her mother also plan to provide food from the store to the family as the fundraising is managed. 'I just felt the community wanted to help and I wanted to open this up to them,' Antonik said. 'It's not going to help with everything, but with something financially. We're very grateful we have such a great community that wants to support the family.' According to the Lake County sheriff's office, Mygal, her husband and 4-year-old daughter, were traveling from a Fourth of July celebration on July 5 at 10:15 p.m. when they were involved in a three-vehicle collision on West Russell and Frontage roads in Wadsworth Mygal, a passenger in the family's 2016 Chevrolet Volt, was taken from the scene to hospital where she succumbed to her injuries. The Lake County Coroner determined she died of blunt force trauma. Her husband and daughter also suffered serious, but non-life threatening injuries, according to authorities. Andrew Willard, 58, of the 600 block of West Natalie Lane, Addison, was charged July 8 with aggravated DUI causing death, DUI and traffic violations for allegedly traveling at a high rate of speed and failing to stop at a stop sign at Frontage Road, striking both the vehicle Mygal was in with her family and another vehicle – which were both stopped at the intersection. The driver and passenger in the other vehicle, as well as Willard, suffered serious, but non-life threatening injuries, Covelli said. 'Crash investigators believe Willard was more than twice the legal limit for alcohol when he crashed,' according to a sheriff's office news release. Willard is being held in the Lake County Jail on pre-trial detention. He is scheduled to appear in court again July 30. Mygal started working as a cashier at Deli 4 You three years ago when the deli opened in Niles, Antonik said. The team at the Niles store saw she was eager to work, be part of a new store and the team, and thought her energy was infectious. Elizabeth Owens-Schiele is a freelancer. Pioneer Press staff contributed.

11 hours ago
Equatorial Guinea urges UN to block the sale of a Paris mansion seized by France
THE HAGUE, Netherlands -- Lawyers for Equatorial Guinea accused France of 'neo-colonial' behavior on Tuesday, urging United Nations judges to block the sale of a mansion on one of Paris' poshest avenues in the latest instalment in a long-running legal tug-of-war over the multimillion-dollar property. The African country filed a case at the International Court of Justice in 2022, alleging France is violating international law by refusing to return assets seized during a corruption investigation into Teodoro Nguema Obiang Mangue, the son of Equatorial Guinea's long-serving president. France's approach 'may be described as paternalistic and even neo-colonial. We cannot accept such disdain for our sovereignty from France," Carmelo Nvono-Ncá, Equatorial Guinea's agent, told The Hague-based court. Equatorial Guinea has asked the court for a series of urgent orders, known as provisional measures, to return the swanky mansion on one of Paris's most prestigious streets, Avenue Foch, and to prevent France from selling the building. Obiang was convicted in 2017, and given a three-year suspended sentence for embezzling millions of dollars in public money. French authorities seized money, luxury vehicles and the building, which boasts a hammam, a cinema and a night club. The 57-year-old has faced scrutiny for corruption in other countries as well. In 2021, he was sanctioned by the United Kingdom for misappropriating public funds, including spending $275,000 on the bejeweled glove that Michael Jackson wore on his 'Bad' tour. Switzerland and Brazil have also opened investigations into his finances. In 2020, the International Court of Justice ruled that the building was a private residence, not a diplomatic outpost, rejecting a claim from Equatorial Guinea that the seizure violated international law. Equatorial Guinea returned to The Hague in 2022, arguing the French government was obliged to return the assets based on a U.N. anti-corruption convention. Despite its oil and gas riches, Equatorial Guinea has a dramatic gap between its privileged ruling class and much of the impoverished population. The former Spanish colony is run by Africa's longest-serving president, Obiang's father Teodoro Obiang Nguema Mbasogo.