1,400 migrants rescued off Libyan coast

Refugees among 2,400 saved since Sunday as Mediterranean weather worsens; 5 bodies found on a dinghy

Migrants wait to be rescued as they drift in the Mediterranean Sea some 20 nautical miles north off the coast of Libya on October 3, 2016. (AFP/Aris Messinis)
Migrants wait to be rescued as they drift in the Mediterranean Sea some 20 nautical miles north off the coast of Libya on October 3, 2016. (AFP/Aris Messinis)

Some 1,400 migrants trying to cross the Mediterranean were rescued Thursday off the coast of Libya, according to the Italian coast guard, which coordinated the operations conducted mainly by aid ships.

Attempts at the dangerous crossing are continuing despite worsening weather as winter approaches, with more than 2,400 migrants rescued off Libya in total since Sunday.

The medical charity Medecins Sans Frontieres tweeted that it had rescued 802 people on six rubber dinghies and one small wooden boat, and MOAS, a Maltese NGO, said it had rescued 432 migrants on three dinghies.

Italian coast guards and the crew of an EU counter-trafficking vessel rescued the remaining migrants.

Boats carrying migrants are treacherous even if they don’t sink: exhaust fumes, hypothermia, dehydration and overcrowding have all proved fatal.

On Wednesday, rescuers found five bodies on a dinghy carrying around 200 people, many of them unaccompanied minors.

The Italian interior ministry said Tuesday that more than 145,000 migrants had landed in Italy so far this year, a figure similar to that of the previous two years.

Fifty life jackets abandoned by migrants, taken from a Greek island and displayed by Oxfam International activists during a demonstration ahead of a European leaders summit in Brussels on October 20, 2016. / AFP PHOTO / EMMANUEL DUNAND
Fifty life jackets abandoned by migrants, taken from a Greek island and displayed by Oxfam International activists during a demonstration ahead of a European leaders summit in Brussels on October 20, 2016. (AFP/Emmanuel Dunand)

According to the UN, at least 3,654 people have died trying to cross the Mediterranean this year.

Meanwhile, it emerged Thursday that as many as 900 migrants may have died in the 2015 sinking off Libya of an overcrowded fishing trawler, about 100 more than previously thought.

The new toll from the worst maritime tragedy in the Mediterranean since World War II came after forensic scientists, who spent three months examining 675 body bags, discovered that many contained the remains of more than one person, Italy’s missing person chief Vittorio Piscitelli told a news conference in Rome.

Only 28 people survived when the 70-foot trawler capsized in April 2015.

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