Turkey intercepts 276 EU-bound migrants off Izmir coast
Migrants and asylum-seekers headed to Europe were found on this boat in Turkey's western Izmir province, July 7, 2020 (AA Photo)


Police intercepted 276 migrants and refugees trying to reach Europe off the Izmir coast in western Turkey and detained eight suspects, according to media reports Tuesday.

Acting on a tip-off, Izmir police rounded up a total of 276 migrants, including asylum-seekers, on a boat off Narlıdere coast, while eight others were arrested over allegations of being smugglers.

The migrants and refugees included Afghan, Bangladeshi, Syrian, Central African, Somali and Iranian nationals brought from different locations in Turkey.

During the operation, police squads found at least 46 women and at least 59 children in a closed and air-tight compartment on the boat. Some of the people evacuated from the boat had difficulty breathing.

Meanwhile, the Turkish coast guard also rescued a total of 65 migrants in three boats in the Aegean Sea, security sources said late Monday.

The sources said the Greek coast guard pushed two life rafts carrying 36 people back toward the coast of Karaburun district in Turkey's Izmir province.

They added that the Greek coast guard did the same thing to a rubber boat carrying 29 people off the coast of Aslan Burnu in Izmir.

All of the people on board the boats were transferred to the provincial immigration authority.

Turkey and Greece have been key transit points for asylum-seekers, refugees and migrants seeking to cross into Europe to start new lives, especially those fleeing war and persecution.

Ankara earlier this year changed its policy on irregular migrants and opened its gates for those wanting to cross to Europe, accusing the European Union of failing to keep its promises under a 2016 migrant deal.

Greece's response to those trying to enter the country without prior authorization has been harsh, with at least three migrants killed by Greek security forces along the land border with Turkey. Many others have been battered and teargassed.

Turkey already hosts over 3.5 million Syrian migrants, more than any other country in the world, and says it cannot handle another wave.

So far this year, Turkey's Coast Guard Command has rescued hundreds of migrants and asylum-seekers off the Aegean coast after they were forced by Greece into Turkish territorial waters.