European rights chief presses Greece on deadly 2023 migrant shipwreck as questions remain
ATHENS, Greece (AP) — A top European human rights official urged Greek authorities Tuesday to address claims of negligence in a 2023 boat disaster that killed hundreds of migrants off the coast of southern Greece.
Michael O'Flaherty, the Council of Europe's human rights commissioner, cited recent findings by Greece's Ombudsman that maintained Greek coast guard officers failed to prevent one of the Mediterranean's deadliest migrant shipwrecks.
Hundreds of migrants died when the Adriana, an overcrowded fishing trawler, sank in international waters off Pylos in southern Greece in June 2023. Survivors claim the Greek coast guard failed to respond to initial distress calls before the vessel capsized – an assertion strongly disputed by the government.
Greek Ombudsman Andreas Pottakis found 'clear indications' that senior coast guard officials disregarded imminent danger to the migrants.
'The Commissioner, who liaises closely with the Ombudsman, notes his important findings and encourages the authorities to take resolute action to ensure appropriate criminal and disciplinary accountability,' O'Flaherty's office said in a report Tuesday.
A copy of the report was provided to The Associated Press.
During his visit to Greece last week, O'Flaherty met with five government ministers and Cabinet officials as well as shipwreck survivors, their lawyers and advocacy groups.
An estimated 500-750 people were aboard the Adriana when it sank while traveling from Libya to Italy. Only 104 people survived, while 82 bodies were recovered. The rest were trapped inside the sinking trawler.
The government last week reaffirmed its full confidence in the coast guard's efforts to protect Greece's maritime borders and rescue operations at sea. It argued that the Ombudsman's report had unfairly accepted allegations made by survivors 'without any reliable documentation.'
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
4 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Trump says he's 'disappointed' with Musk after former backer turned on the Republican tax bill
WASHINGTON (AP) — President Donald Trump said Thursday he's 'disappointed' with Elon Musk after his former backer and advisor lambasted the president's signature bill. Trump suggested the world's richest man misses being in the White House and has 'Trump derangement syndrome.' The Republican president reflected on his breakup with Musk in front of reporters in the Oval Office as Musk continued a storm of social media posts attacking Trump's 'Big Beautiful Bill' and warning it will increase the federal deficit. 'I'm very disappointed in Elon," Trump said. 'I've helped Elon a lot.' Musk has called Trump's big tax break bill a 'disgusting abomination.' The Associated Press Sign in to access your portfolio
Yahoo
5 minutes ago
- Yahoo
EU could approve Mercosur deal by summer, agriculture chief says
By Kate Abnett BRUSSELS (Reuters) -The European Union could approve its planned trade deal with South American bloc Mercosur before summer, but it has not yet fixed a date to do so, EU agriculture commissioner Christophe Hansen told Reuters on Thursday. "It could be before summer," Hansen said in an interview. EU nations still need to approve the deal, which was finalised in December but has faced opposition from members including France, which argues that the pact would hurt European farmers who face stricter norms and regulations than their South American peers. French President Emmanuel Macron and Brazil's President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva discussed their differences on the pact at a meeting in Paris on Thursday. Macron said the text could be improved with the insertion of mirror clauses. France has previously argued for the insertion of an emergency break clause to restrict imports if a sudden surge in imports destabilises certain EU markets. "This would indeed require that we go back to the table and reopen. I don't think that this would be helpful in this situation," Hansen said of the idea of resuming negotiations with Mercosur countries to add new safeguards to the deal. "I see from many different parts of the agriculture and food sector, they are really looking for having these new opportunities," he added.
Yahoo
8 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Gang followed and stabbed Greek tourist after botched bag robbery, court hears
A gang of five people allegedly followed and stabbed a Greek tourist multiple times after a failed attempt to steal his bag, a court has heard. Antonis Antoniadis, 26, was allegedly followed and attacked on a doorstep in New Cross, south-east London, on July 7 last year. He died two weeks later from his injuries. Four men – Shian Johnson, 25, Sofian Alliche, 20, Joshua McCorquodale, 20, and Alfie Hipple, 18 – and a 17-year-old youth are charged with his murder and planning to rob his personal items. Opening their trial at the Old Bailey on Thursday, prosecutor William Emlyn Jones KC said the defendants tracked Mr Antoniadis across London before fatally stabbing him in the chest and thigh as he tried to defend himself on the ground, causing 'catastrophic blood loss'. Mr Antoniadis had come on holiday to London for a week from Greece with two friends, and they ended up at the 32 Portland Place nightclub in Marylebone in the early hours of July 7, jurors were told. The trio did not leave the venue until after 8am and had booked an Uber to get back to a friend's address in New Cross where they were staying. Mr Emlyn Jones said: 'They had no idea that five young men had been hanging around outside that nightclub all night in a stolen car, looking for someone they could rob. 'It seems that when that group of five saw Antonis come out of the club, those robbers thought they had found a suitable target. 'So when they saw him come out and get into his Uber, they, in their stolen car, followed him.' The defendants then followed the taxi for more than half an hour to its destination, the court heard. As one of Mr Antoniadis's friends struggled to find the door key upon arriving at the address, the victim 'was approached by four figures in hoods and balaclavas', with the fifth group member acting as a getaway driver, the prosecutor said. Mr Antoniadis managed to hit one of the robbers with a brandy bottle as he then struggled against the group, who appeared to want to take a bag he was carrying. 'Tragically, whether it was brave or whether it was just an instinctive response, that reaction was to cost him his life,' Mr Emlyn Jones said. At least two of the attackers were carrying large knives, the court heard. After he was punched and kicked by the attackers, Mr Antoniadis was then stabbed in the middle of the chest and suffered a large, deep stab wound to his right thigh which severed his femoral artery. He also suffered cuts and bruises to his face and head and wounds to his arms, the prosecutor said. The attackers then fled the scene in the getaway car, leaving the victim bleeding to death. There was no CCTV footage of the incident, but some or all of it was heard or seen by a number of people, the court heard. Mr Antoniadis was treated at the scene and taken to hospital where attempts were made to save his life, but he later died from his injuries on July 21 last year. Mr Emlyn Jones said: 'It is the prosecution case that the five robbers were the five young men sitting in the dock in this room, and that all five of them are jointly responsible for the murder.' The prosecutor told jurors the group were 'clearly prepared to use really serious violence' in their efforts to rob Mr Antoniadis's possessions. The car allegedly used by the robbers – a stolen Kia Sportage with false number plates – was captured on CCTV on two occasions leaving the area around the nightclub and following a different car on the night of July 7, the court heard. CCTV footage first captured the vehicle in the area of 32 Portland Place at 1.35am. Earlier in the evening, Alliche, Hipple and the 17-year-old youth, who cannot be named due to his age, were caught on CCTV at a McDonald's restaurant with two other men unconnected with the case at around 9pm before getting into the stolen Kia, jurors were told. McCorquodale left his home address to join the group at around 10.35pm, with same car seen on CCTV outside his residence. Footage played in court then showed the passengers gathering and crouching down around the rear of the car whilst parked in a small cul-de-sac in Camden. Mr Emlyn Jones said this showed the defendants removing the Kia's number plates and putting on false ones, which had come from another car of the same model. Further CCTV footage then showed one passenger being dropped off at Chalk Farm underground station at 11.15pm, before the vehicle was captured heading to Johnson's home address fifteen minutes later. The car then spent some time moving around Islington and Camden, including at a petrol station just after midnight, before making its way towards the area around the nightclub, the court heard. The prosecutor said the rough whereabouts of the defendants were backed up and matched to those of the car by mobile 'cell-site' data gathered from each of them throughout the evening. All five defendants, from Camden, north London, deny murder and conspiracy to commit robbery. The trial continues.