CYPRUS: Two Syrians face smuggling charges after 131 migrants arrive by boat

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Two Syrians will appear in court on Tuesday suspected of helping to smuggle 131 migrants to Cyprus who arrived on the island on a boat from Turkey.


Cyprus police said Monday they towed to shore 131 migrants, almost all from Syria, after they were sighted on an overcrowded boat off the island's northwest tip near Paphos.

The boat with 129 Syrians, one Lebanese and an Egyptian on board was located five nautical miles off the coast by a patrol vessel and tugged to Latchi harbour.

Police believe the boat set off from Turkey, a route used by people smugglers in the past.

According to the official Cyprus News Agency, those on board told police they had paid smugglers $2,000 each to bring them to the island.

Once they neared the island, the captain had abandoned the vessel on a speed boat.

Two Syrian men, aged 33 and 43, seen on a speed boat in the same waters as the migrant vessel were arrested for questioning, police said.

Investigators are also looking to question the Cypriot owner of the boat.

The migrants, including five women and eight children, were transferred to a reception centre outside the capital Nicosia.

In August, Cyprus requested fellow EU member states to take in 5,000 of its migrants to alleviate the "disproportionate pressures" it faced.

The small member state has yet to receive a response.

According to available data, the number of migrants arriving in Cyprus and applying for asylum between January and June 2019 reached nearly 7,000.

The backlog of applications awaiting examination has increased to 15,000.

But Cyprus, located 100 miles (160 kilometres) from the Syrian coast, has not seen the massive inflow of migrants experienced by Turkey and Greece.