Last week, 400 people drowned in the Mediterranean. This time, however, no TV station interrupted its broadcast and the tragedy barely made it onto European front pages.
Whereas the migrants who died in the Mediterranean were African refugees, the victims of the Germanwings disasters were primarily Europeans. Many say this is sufficient to explain why each case was treated so differently.
Estimates of the number of refugees killed while trying to reach Europe by crossing the Mediterranean Sea vary widely. A joint research project of European journalists recently found at least 23,000 refugees had lost their lives in the past 14 years.
This week, several prominent journalists have taken a pronounced stance against the response to the catastrophe off Europe's shorelines.
Corinna Milborn, the news director of Austria's Puls4 network, tweeted on Tuesday: "What would be happening right now if 400 passengers of a cruise liner had drowned in the Mediterranean today?"
Leftist German newspaper Die Tageszeitung featured an obituary. "400 people — deceased April 12, 2015," the headline read.
On Friday 20 migrants were discovered, having been adrift at sea for two days, with grave burns from a cooking gas explosion before departing Libya. The victims were forced onto a smuggler's boat without treatment.
Among the burn victims rescued from the half-deflated dinghy was a 6-month-old. One burn victim died en route to the Italian island of Lampedusa.
Prosecutors in Sicily, meanwhile, were investigating 15 Muslim migrants for allegedly throwing 12 Christians overboard in a religious dispute. Italian ships have picked up an unprecedented 10,000 people in the past week. The influx is putting pressure on Italy's shelters and raising calls for a better response.
In Washington, President Barack Obama pledged more intense cooperation with Italy on threats coming from the instability in Libya.

