Cyprus authorities said Saturday their emergency services have rescued 45 Syrian migrants from two distressed vessels as the country’s authorities acquired information near a coastal tourist resort.
According to the eastern Mediterranean island’s Joint Rescue Coordination Centre, it had brought ashore 29 men, five women and 11 children who had been afloat off Cape Greco Thursday evening.
“They were in good health and had been transferred to a migrant reception centre on the outskirts of the capital Nicosia,” said Police.
Authorities have also detained two people, 20 and 18, on suspicion of navigating the boats and were set to be presented before the court Friday.
European Union (EU) member Cyprus noted that it is on “the front line of the bloc’s irregular migration flows, and last year registered the EU’s highest number of first-time asylum applicants per capita.”
Those rescued Thursday evening were 18 irregular migrants on a wooden boat and another 27 aboard an inflatable craft. Police said they had set off from war-torn Syria before being detected off Cape Greco, near the tourist resort of Aya Napa on the island’s southeast coast.—APP