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		 Greece 
		searches for 38 migrants off Lesbos, four children drown 
		
		 
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		[October 29, 2015] 
		By Michele Kambas and Angeliki Koutantou 
		  
		 ATHENS (Reuters) - Four children, two men 
		and one woman drowned and 38 migrants were missing after their wooden 
		boat sank north of the Greek island of Lesbos, the coast guard said on 
		Thursday, as an extensive search operation continued for a second day. 
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			 The coast guard rescued 242 people off Lesbos on Wednesday in what 
			was thought to be the largest maritime disaster off Greece in terms 
			of numbers involved since a massive refugee influx began this year. 
			The search went on overnight. 
			 
			Four coast guard vessels were deployed on Thursday, assisted by 
			fishing boats. Three helicopters were hovering above the sea. 
			 
			Lesbos, which lies less than 10 km (6 miles) from the Turkish coast 
			in the north Aegean Sea, has been a primary gateway for thousands of 
			migrants entering the European Union's outermost border. 
			 
			Another 123 people were rescued off the islands of Samos and 
			Agathonisi, and in another incident off Lesbos. In total, 15 people 
			drowned on Wednesday including ten children, the coast guard said. A 
			baby has been missing for more than 12 hours. 
			  
			  
			 
			Doctors and volunteers on Lesbos made desperate efforts to help a 
			baby breathe, TV footage showed. Some of the survivors were 
			sheltered in a chapel, a Reuters witness said. 
			 
			"We will really support Greece," German Foreign Minister 
			Frank-Walter Steinmeier told a Greek newspaper before an official 
			visit to Athens on Thursday, the latest in a series of visits by EU 
			officials to the crisis-hit country. 
			 
			"It's clear that Greece - which is trying to get back on its feet 
			right now - is feeling this influx as a particular burden." More 
			than 500,000 refugees and migrants have entered Greece through its 
			outlying islands since January, transiting on to central and 
			northern Europe in what has become the biggest humanitarian crisis 
			on the continent in two decades. 
			 
			
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			Inflows have increased as refugees try to beat the onset of winter, 
			crossing the narrow sea passages between Turkey and Greece in small 
			overcrowded boats. 
			 
			EU leaders have agreed to boost cooperation and provide UN-aided 
			housing for 100,000 people, half of them in Greece. The EU is 
			expected to cover costs for accommodation for 20,000 in leased 
			apartments in addition to temporary camps for 30,000 people. 
			 
			Relocation of migrants from Greece to other EU states could take up 
			to two months, Migration Minister Ioannis Mouzalas said, adding that 
			the risk of thousands of refugees being trapped in Greece from 
			possible border closures was a remote case. 
			 
			"That's a tragic scenario ... but I consider the chances of that 
			very small," he said. 
			 
			(Writing by Renee Maltezou; Editing by Richard Balmforth) 
			
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