Gambia president, Adama Barrow has vowed to punish traffickers after a boat mishap.
However, the president has instituted a probe panel as the nation mourns the ‘National Disaster’.
The boat disaster saw dozens of people drowning off Mauritania.
Adama Barrow of Gambia has pledged to punish human traffickers following the deaths of dozens of people who drowned this week. When their boat attempting to reach Europe capsized off Mauritania.
“To lose 60 young lives at sea is a national tragedy and a matter of grave concern to my government,” Barrow said on Saturday in televised remarks.
“A full police investigation has been launched to get to the bottom of this serious national disaster. The culprits will be prosecuted according to law,” he added.
Atleast 62 people drowned off the Mauritanian coast on Wednesday when the boat carrying them to Spain’s Canary Islands hit a rock .
This is the largest known loss of life along the so-called western migration route this year, according to the International Organization for Migration (IOM).
More than 80 survived the disaster by swimming ashore to Mauritania.
Al Jazeera’s Mohamed Vall, reporting from Nouadhibou on Mauritania’s coast, said foreign media were denied access to the rescued people, unlike previous instances.
Barrow said funds had been sent to Mauritania to cater for the immediate needs of the survivors admitted to hospital. And to finance their repatriation.
The preside also pledged to “fast track prosecution of cases involving human trafficking.
“Law enforcement officials are also instructed to increase surveillance and arrest criminals involved in human trafficking,” he said.
More than 158 people are known to have died trying to reach the Canary Islands so far this year, according to the IOM, compared with 43 last year
Upon this, on Saturday, the IOM said a boat carrying several people was intercepted in the high seas off Mauritania the previous day by the country’s coastguard.
The passengers were brought back to Nouamghar, about 150 kilometres (95 miles) north of the capital, Nouakchott. And were given food and blankets.
It was stated that the boat carried between 150 and 180 people. These migrants are still being identified by the local authorities, said Laura Lungarotti, the IOM’s chief in Mauritania.
Gambia president said he had been informed about the incident, adding that arrangements had been made to transport the people on the boat back to Banjul, the capital of The Gambia.
Migrant passages along the route from West African countries to the Canary Islands have increased recently as authorities clamp down on crossings to Europe from Libya.
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