At Least Six Dead as Ship Packed With Migrants Sinks Off Turkey
It was not immediately known if the six dead were members of the crew or illegal immigrants.
Some 32 people were saved, said Nazmi Gunlu, a police official at the Turkish resort of Kemer, revising an earlier figure of 39 rescued.
According to survivors, there were about 80 immigrants from India and Pakistan on board, Gunlu told Anatolia news agency, adding "We are trying to find around 50 people reported missing."
The ship, the Fati, which had set out from the Israeli port of Ashdod, docked at the southern Turkish port of Antalya on December 27, on its way to the Greek port of Pyrea.
It was supposed to take on board a cargo of cement but had been unable to do so because of the combination of celebrations marking the end of the Muslim fasting month of Ramazan and bad weather.
The Greek skipper Polizois Galanis decided to leave Antalya and had been informed of the weather conditions.
Rescue efforts were still underway at the site where the ship went down, near the Turkish resort of Kemer.
Turkey is one of the main routes used by Asian nationals trying to get to Western Europe in search of a better life.