Pregnant women, children among 27 dead in English Channel
CTV
French President Emmanuel Macron appealed Thursday to neighbouring European countries to do more to stop illegal migration into France after at least 27 people died trying to cross the English Channel.
What Devos found was gruesome. But not, he later sorrowfully acknowledged, wholly unexpected. With migrants often setting off by the hundreds in flotillas of unseaworthy and overloaded vessels into the busy shipping lane crisscrossed by hulking freighters, and frequently beset by treacherous weather, waves and currents, Devos had long feared that tragedy would ensue.
That came this week, with the deadliest migration accident to date on the dangerous stretch of sea that separates France and Britain.
“We picked up six floating bodies. We passed by an inflatable craft that was deflated. The little bit of air remaining kept it afloat,” Devos told reporters.
“I'd been somewhat expecting it because I'd say, `It's going to end with a drama,”' he said.