5 migrants drown off Turkish coast during attempt to reach Greece

1Migrants who were rescued by Turkish Coast Guard as they were trying to cross on a boat to the nearby Greek island of Kos, are brought to the port of Turgutreis near the coastal town of Bodrum, Turkey on Aug. 18, 2015.
2Five people have drowned off the Turkish coast as they tried to reach the Greek islands.
3BODRUM, Turkey - At least five people drowned off the Turkish coast early Tuesday as they tried to reach the Greek islands, underscoring the deadly risks taken by migrants making even short crossings to Europe in overcrowded smugglers' boats.
4Turkish coast guards unloaded five body bags at the harbour of western Turkey tourist town Bodrum as rescued migrants, one man clutching his head in his hands, sat on the wharf.
5Medical staff carried a wailing young boy and a man to ambulances.
6About 20 migrants also were rescued and taken to a harbour in the nearby town of Turgutreis.
7Details of the identities and nationalities of the dead were not immediately available.
8Ayberk Olcay of the Bodrum Sea Rescue Association, who was involved in the rescue operation, said a baby's body also was recovered and three more people, including a child, were rescued.
9The numbers of migrants attempting perilous sea crossings to Europe continue to climb despite the risks.
10Italian Interior Minister Angelino Alfano said at the weekend that as of Saturday, 103,000 migrants had been rescued at sea and brought to Italy in operations co-ordinated by the Italian coast guard.
11Along with other migrants landing in Spain and Malta, that means more than 243,000 people have crossed so far this year, compared to 219,000 for all of 2014.
12Greece has reported 134,988 arrivals from Turkey this year.
13The International Organization for Migration estimates that at least 2,300 people have died this year trying to cross to Europe.
14It is unclear how many people may have died between Bodrum and the Greek island of Kos, which is only four kilometres from Turkey at its closest point, making it one of the shortest routes across the Aegean.