Families of dead migrants share anger over OceanGate rescue effort — and other world news you may have missed

The relatives of migrants who were on a boat that capsized in the Mediterranean Sea on June 14 expressed their frustration and disbelief at the millions of dollars spent trying to recover the OceanGate submersible that had gone missing in the Atlantic Ocean while trying to visit the Titanic shipwreck, the Guardian reported.

Anees Majeed’s relatives were just five of the roughly 750 people who were aboard the overcrowded fishing vessel. Many of those on board, like Majeed’s family, were from Pakistan. Just days after the migrant boat sank, news broke of the missing submersible, which had five passengers — each of whom had paid $250,000 for the experience.

A multimillion-dollar rescue effort was launched, making headlines across the world even though the passengers had signed waivers acknowledging that the vessel was “experimental” and that death was a possibility. Meanwhile, in the days after the migrant boat sank, the Greek Coast Guard was accused of causing the vessel to capsize.

A photo shows an aerial view of the boat carrying migrants before it sank.
An aerial view of the boat carrying migrants before it sank, in Kalamata, Greece, on June 14. (Greek Coast Guard/Handout/Anadolu Agency via Getty Images)

Speaking to the Guardian, Majeed said: “We were shocked to know that millions would be spent on this rescue mission. They used all resources, and so much news came out from this search. But they did not bother to search for hundreds of Pakistanis and other people who were on the Greek boat.”

Why it matters

The discrepancy between the efforts and attention brought to the two tragedies has prompted a discussion on the inequality experienced by the world’s poor. At least 500 people who were on the migrant fishing boat are still missing. According to reports, there were between 50 and 100 children on board.

Rear Adm. John Mauger of the Coast Guard at a news conference about the missing Titan submersible.
Rear Adm. John Mauger of the Coast Guard at a news conference about the missing Titan submersible. (Fatih Aktas/Anadolu Agency via Getty Images)

Similar cases have happened before. In 2021, a nongovernmental organization accused the British and French coast guards of ignoring distress calls from people on a dinghy that sank in the English Channel. Twenty-seven people drowned.

According to U.N. stats, over 27,000 people are estimated to have disappeared or died while crossing the Mediterranean in the last nine years, making it the most dangerous migrant crossing in the world. But the route remains essential for those looking to Northern and Western Europe in the hopes of escaping poverty and war.

WHO says El Niño likely to cause increase in viral diseases

Dengue fever patients under mosquito nets at a hospital in Lahore, Pakistan.
Dengue fever patients under mosquito nets at a hospital in Lahore, Pakistan, in 2021. (Arif Ali/AFP via Getty Images)

The chief of the World Health Organization said the agency is preparing for an increase in viral diseases as a result of the El Niño weather pattern, Reuters reported. Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said the transmission of viruses such as Zika, chikungunya and dengue will increase this year and next year due to El Niño, a rise in the surface temperature of water in the Pacific Ocean. Tedros added that the warmer temperatures are driving up the number of mosquitoes that transmit some of these deadly viruses.

Gas explosion in Paris leaves dozens injured

Smoke rises above rooftops following a gas explosion in Paris.
Smoke rises above rooftops following a gas explosion in Paris on June 21. (Gonzalo Fuentes/Reuters)

A gas explosion damaged a building and injured over 30 people in the historic Latin Quarter in Paris, CBS News reported. Of those injured, four were in “absolute emergency,” French Interior Minister Gérald Darmanin told local news. Some 320 firefighters and over 200 police officers rushed to the scene last Wednesday. The cause of the explosion is yet to be uncovered.