By Borja Suarez
EL HIERRO, Spain (Reuters) -Patrol boats and helicopters searched on Sunday for about 48 migrants missing since their boat sank near the Spanish island of El Hierro in what threatens to be the deadliest such incident in 30 years of crossings from Africa to the Canary Islands.
Nine people, one of them a child, have been confirmed as dead after their boat sank in the early hours of Saturday morning, emergency and rescue services said.
Rescuers were able to pick up 27 of 84 migrants who were trying to reach the Spanish coast on Saturday. Three patrol boats and three helicopters were taking part in the renewed search on Sunday, a Spanish coastguard spokesman told Reuters.
The migrants were from Mali, Mauritania and Senegal, Spanish authorities said.
The emergency services received a call on Saturday shortly after midnight from the boat, which was located around four miles east of El Hierro. It sank during the rescue, they said.
Wind and poor visibility made the rescue extremely difficult.
“After what happened yesterday and if the forecast for the arrival of the migrant boats happens, then it will be the biggest humanitarian crisis to happen to the Canary Islands in 30 years,” Candelaria Delgado of the Canary Islands government, told reporters on Sunday.
Three of those rescued suffered from hypothermia and dehydration, rescue services said on Sunday.
The nine migrants who died will be buried on Monday and Tuesday.
As hopes of finding more survivors diminished, police installed a morgue on El Hierro, authorities said.
Among the dead was a child aged between 12-15, according to the NGO Walking Borders, which helps migrants.
Three other boats reached the Canary Islands during the night, carrying 208 migrants.
Calm seas and gentle winds associated with late summer in the Atlantic Ocean off West Africa have prompted a renewed surge of migrants, local authorities said this month.
The route from Africa to the islands has seen a 154% surge in migrants this year, with 21,620 migrants crossing in the first seven months, data from the European Union’s border agency Frontex showed.
In some 30 years of migrant crossings to the islands the deadliest shipwreck recorded to date occurred in 2009 off the island of Lanzarote when 25 people died.
(Reporting by Graham Keeley, Borja Suarez, Ana Cantero, Editing by Angus MacSwan)
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