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Four Migrants Found Dead in the Mediterranean, 945 Rescued

Italy is currently the main point of entry for seaborne migration from Africa amid Europe's worst migration crisis since World War II.
Isla Binnie
Jul 13 2016
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Italy is currently the main point of entry for seaborne migration from Africa amid Europe's worst migration crisis since World War II.
An on-going rescue mission (representative Image). Credit: Reuters.
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An on-going rescue mission (representative Image). Credit: Reuters.

Rome: Nearly 1,000 migrants were saved in six separate rescue operations in the Mediterranean on Tuesday, July 12, while four were found dead below the deck of their boat, Italy's coast guard said.

The four dead had suffocated, according to the Malta-based humanitarian group Migrant Offshore Aid Station (MOAS), whose Topaz Responder rescue ship recovered the bodies and 400 survivors from the same boat.

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Italy has long been on the front line of seaborne migration from Africa to Europe and is now the main point of entry after the EU struck a deal with Turkey to stem flows to Greece amid Europe's worst migration crisis since World War II.

Slightly fewer migrants arrived on Italian shores in the first six months of 2016 compared with the same period last year, but the number of deaths on the route have risen, according to the International Organisation for Migration (IOM).

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The coast guard, whom rescuers have to contact when they pick people up at sea, said six rescue operations had rescued 945 people on Tuesday, July 12, within about 48 km of the Libyan coast.

All six boats, including four rubber dinghies, are believed to have set off from Libya, where criminal gangs have taken advantage of the breakdown of order to charge people hundreds or even thousands of dollars for the perilous crossing.

As well as MOAS, fellow humanitarian agencies Doctors Without Borders, Germany-based Sea-Watch, and the EU rescue ship Reina Sofia took part in the operations, which were coordinated by the coast guard in Rome.

Italy's Navy said one of its helicopters had air-lifted one migrant suffering respiratory problems to the island of Lampedusa and that two of its own ships had been involved in rescues.

Emergency, a medical humanitarian organisation, also treated one person who was found on the wooden boat in a critical condition, MOAS said. It was not clear if this was the same person air-lifted to Lampedusa.

More than 67,000 seaborne migrants arrived in Italy between January 1 and July 3, according to the IOM.

(Reuters)

This article went live on July thirteenth, two thousand sixteen, at zero minutes past two in the afternoon.

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