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KJ

El Capitan
Joined
Dec 2, 2010
Messages
907
Location
USA
Vessel Name
Avalon
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Chung Hwa 46 LRC
Migrant boat sinks in Bahamas; at least 11 dead


NASSAU, Bahamas — A boat packed with Haitian migrants headed for the United States sunk and 11 bodies have been recovered from the ocean, a Bahamas police spokeswoman said Monday.

Royal Bahamas Police Inspector Chrislyn Skippings said the death toll was expected to rise because investigators believe at least 28 Haitians were on board the 25-foot smuggler's vessel when it set off Sunday from Abaco.

Skippings said seven people had been rescued and a search was under way for other survivors among the at least 10 people thought missing, including five children.

"The vessel was en route to Florida. They developed engine problems which resulted in the vessel taking on water," Skippings said during a phone interview.

The U.S. Coast Guard dispatched a plane based in Miami and a helicopter based on Andros Island, Bahamas, to help search for survivors, Guard spokesman Petty Officer John-Paul Rios said.

The U.S. Coast Guard patrols the region for drug traffickers and illegal migrants and often helps in search and rescue efforts.

Haitian migrants have been coming to the Bahamas for years, fleeing severe poverty in the Western Hemisphere's poorest country. The migrants mostly try to reach the U.S., though some stay in the Bahamas to form a low-income workforce.

Abaco has a population of about 13,000 people. The Abaco islands are about 180 miles (290 kilometers) east of Florida. Â Hundreds of Haitians have been living in a couple of overcrowded shantytowns called Pigeon Pea and "The Mud" on Abaco, near Marsh Harbor, for years despite repeated government threats to evict them. The community is a mix of permanent residents, naturalized citizens and migrants.

The Bahamas lies more than 600 kilometers (375 miles) northeast of Haiti. Haitian migrants sneak into the Bahamas illegally by boat, paying roughly $500 for the perilous journey.
 
Greetings,
I'm saddened especially for the children although ANY loss of life is tragic-I don't care who or from what race/nationality. It is bordering on senseless that with the excesses of North America such depravity is allowed and tolerated not only in Haiti but worldwide.
With this comment maybe this should be moved to OTDE.
 
RTF you're right, America has so much and some 3rd world countries so little. But don't be too quick to blame this disparity on our greed. Most impoverished countries are let by greedy, corrupt politicians that go to great lengths to keep themselves in power and their population ignorant and poor.

I'm sadden to know that many Americans sent rather large sums of money to charities whose intention was to help Haiti after their devastating earthquake only to find out that much of that money was never spent to help Haiti due to many different reasons, most of which were political.
 
RTF you're right, America has so much and some 3rd world countries so little. But don't be too quick to blame this disparity on our greed..

Greed??! We have much because many of us work hard and our institutions are less corrupt/inefficient than many other societes.
 
We have so much because we produce so much more so much more efficiently because our political/economic system allows virtually everyone some access to the means of production.
 
Greetings,
I never mentioned greed at all. Hard work, a goodly supply of resources and an abundance of the "smarts" has made America what she is today.
 
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