Cyprus Cruise Liner Rescues 345 Refugees

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A cruise liner returning from Greece was pressed into action in rough seas off Cyprus Thursday to rescue 345 people thought to be Syrian refugees whose trawler had run into trouble.

The refugees, including dozens of children, were loaded aboard the Salamis Filoxenia cruise liner and were in "good health", according to George Ppouro, the harbor master in the Cypriot port of Limassol.

The defense ministry said 293 adults and 52 children had been on board and that the rescue operation had been "completed smoothly and without any injury".

The vessel was expected to dock at around 8:30 pm (1730 GMT) in Limassol, where the interior ministry said the migrants would be given health checks.

The liner had been en route from the Greek island of Syros to Limassol when it received a call to assist in the rescue operation.

The trawler sent out a distress signal at 6:25 am (0325 GMT) when it was about 50 nautical miles southwest of the tourist hub of Paphos, the Cypriot government said.

The defense ministry had first said around 300 people, mostly women and children, were on board and needed rescue "because of bad weather conditions in the area".

"The ship probably comes from Syria with civilian refugees," a statement added.

Aerial photographs released by the ministry showed a large fishing trawler overloaded with people in heavy seas.

State radio said two police patrol boats had been dispatched and the cruise liner diverted after a warning that the boat was in danger of sinking.

The director of Limassol General Hospital, Chrysostomos Andronikou, said medical teams would be at the port to receive the migrants and to hospitalize any needing treatment.

The interior ministry said the migrants would be bused to the Pournara army camp in the small town of Kokkinotrimithia, about 10 kilometers (six miles) west of the capital Nicosia.

In August 2012, seven Syrians, including two children, drowned when the boat they were sailing to Cyprus to escape the conflict in their homeland sank off the island's northern coast.

Cyprus is located about 100 kilometers (62 miles) from the shores of war-ravaged Syria.

The Mediterranean has been plagued by shipwrecks in recent months involving migrants trying to reach Europe from Africa and the Middle East.

In one of the deadliest wrecks on record, a ship carrying some 500 migrants -- including Syrians, Palestinians and Egyptians -- was deliberately sunk by traffickers off Malta earlier this month, leaving just 10 known survivors.

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