The events on Sunday highlight the risks that those
fleeing conflict and poverty to Europe [Reuters]
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At least 13 refugees have died after their boat
collided with a ferry off the Turkish coast on
Sunday, officials there said, while the Greek coast
guard fanned out in the choppy waters of the
Aegean Sea searching for another 27 people
missing after their boat sank off the island of
Lesbos.
Coast guard officials said some 29 people were
rescued in the two incidents, which followed
another sinking near Lesbos on Saturday, in which a
5-year-old girl drowned. Between 10 and 12 people
went missing.
Meanwhile, the Libyan coastguard said it rescued
215 refugees Sunday from two boats in the
Mediterranean, including more than 50 women, a
day after Italy said over 4,500 people were saved
off Libya.
The events highlight the risks that those fleeing
conflict and poverty in the Middle East, Africa and
Asia are willing to take in hopes of reaching
sanctuary in Europe.
Men, women and children continue to take the
perilous sea journey despite the fact that thousands
of earlier refugees find themselves blocked by
closed border crossings in the Balkans.
Hungary's decision to shut its border with Serbia on
September 15 set off a chain reaction in Croatia and
Slovenia that has forced people fleeing violence in
their homelands to rush from one European border
to the next as they desperately try to find their way
north before the rules change again.
Thousands are on the move all over southeastern
Europe as authorities struggle to respond. Some
11,000 migrants crossed from Hungary into Austria
in the 24-hour period ending on midnight Saturday,
with at least another 7,000 expected Sunday.
In the Austrian border village of Nickelsdorf people
arrived by foot after completing a half-an-hour walk
from the Hungarian town of Hegyeshalom. From
there, buses and trains take them to emergency
shelters in Vienna and other parts of Austria.
Meanwhile, leaders all across the region are sniping
at one another, underscoring the sense of crisis and
disarray.
Razor-wire fences
Hungary's building of razor-wire fences is deeply
straining its ties with neighboring countries, who
feel the problem of the huge flow of refugees is
being unfairly pushed onto them.
After completing a fence along the border with
Serbia, Hungary is now building fences along its
borders with Croatia and Romania.
After lashing out against Croatian officials,
Hungarian Foreign Minister Peter Szijjarto is now
trading barbs with his Romanian counterpart over
the fence.
Romanian Foreign Minister Bogdan Aurescu on
Saturday called the border closure an "autistic and
unacceptable act" that violated the spirit of the
European Union.
"We would expect more modesty from a foreign
minister whose prime minister is currently facing
trial," Szijjarto said. That was a reference to
corruption charges filed recently against Romanian
Prime Minister Victor Ponta.
"We are a state that is more than 1,000 years old
that throughout its history has had to defend not
only itself, but Europe as well many times,"
Szijjarto added.
"That's the way it's going to be now, whether the
Romanian foreign minister likes it or not."
The Hungarian Foreign Ministry has called in the
Romanian ambassador for a consultation on
Monday.


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