By Associated Press - Wednesday, October 10, 2018

ANKARA, Turkey (AP) - The Latest on Europe’s response to mass migration: (all times local):

9:15 p.m.

Greek police say three females found dead by a river on the border with Turkey and believed to be migrants had been stabbed in the neck.

Police said a farmer found the victims Wednesday on the Greek side of the River Evros, which runs between Greece and Turkey, near the village of Pragi.

Police say they appear to be between the ages of 15 and 25, but their identities and nationalities are unknown.

The Evros area is an entry point for migrants trying to enter Greece illegally from Turkey. Arrivals have roughly doubled this year compared to 2017.

Most plan to continue on to more prosperous European countries, but are blocked by a series of closed borders in the Balkan.

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7 p.m.

A woman whose rescue fueled outrage at Italy’s efforts to have Libya’s coast guard bring migrants back has written to her Spanish rescuers and assured them she is being taken care of.

The Cameroonian woman, identified as Josepha, was rescued by the Spanish aid group Proactiva Open Arms on July 17.

The group accused the Libyan coast guard of abandoning her and two others after intercepting 160 Europe-bound migrants. Proactiva said the three had refused to board Libyan vessels and were left behind.

Proactiva provided a letter Wednesday in which Josepha wrote from her Spanish hospital that “when they abandoned me, they all left with another boat, I thought I was already dead.”

Josepha’s case sparked outrage at Italy’s insistence that Libya spearheads rescues despite international consensus that Libya isn’t secure.

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4:50 p.m.

Greek authorities say a coast guard officer credited with saving thousands of lives off the eastern Aegean island of Lesbos at the height of Europe’s migration crisis has died at age 44.

The coast guard said in a statement that Lt. Kyriakos Papadopoulos suffered a fatal heart attack early Wednesday.

Papadopoulos became a local hero while commanding a patrol boat that, according to the coast guard, rescued more than 5,000 migrants who ran into trouble while attempting the dangerous water crossing from nearby Turkey.

Most of the rescues took part under hectic conditions in 2015, when about a million people made the journey in flimsy craft provided by smuggling gangs, the majority reaching Lesbos. Many drowned on the way.

Merchant Marine Minister Fotis Kouvelis praised Papadopoulos, a Lesbos native, for his humanitarian values.

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4:10 p.m.

Greek authorities say the bodies of three women who are believed to have entered Greece illegally from Turkey were found in a northeastern border region.

Police said the bodies were discovered Wednesday close to the River Evros, which runs along the land border between Turkey and Greece.

The area is a major entry point for migrants trying to enter Greece illegally, and has recently seen an upsurge in traffic.

Tens of thousands of migrants are trapped in Greece, including some 19,000 on the country’s eastern Aegean Sea islands.

Most are seeking to continue on to more prosperous European countries, but blocked by a series of closed borders in the Balkans.

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2:45 p.m.

Turkey’s coast guard says a boat carrying migrants has capsized off the country’s Aegean coast, killing at least nine people.

A search and rescue mission was underway Wednesday for about 25 migrants who are believed to be missing.

Turkey’s state-run Anadolu Agency obtained a statement a statement to police by an Iraqi woman who swam back to shore and sought help from Turkish authorities. She reported that the boat with carrying up to 35 passengers capsized Monday evening.

Anadolu reported the 30-year-old woman said she boarded the boat with her husband and their five children.

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12:00 p.m.

Turkey’s Interior Ministry says a boat carrying migrants has capsized off Turkey’s Aegean coast, killing at least four people. Up to 30 others are believed to be missing.

The ministry says an Iraqi woman who survived the capsizing made it back to shore and sought help from Turkish authorities after the boat went down Wednesday off the town of Karaburun, in Izmir province.

The Coast Guard dispatched vessels, a plane and a helicopter to search for the missing, the ministry said.

Although their numbers have decreased in recent years, migrants still try to cross into Greece from nearby Turkey in the hopes of making their way to other European countries.

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