Rescuers saved 3,000
migrants in the waters off Libya on Tuesday as they tried desperately to reach
Europe, a day after a record 6,500 people were rescued in the Mediterranean.
“Around 3,000 migrants
were saved Tuesday during 30 operations coordinated by the coastguard,” the
Italian coastguard said in a statement.
After several weeks of
relative calm in the stretch of Mediterranean between Italy and Libya, more
than 1,100 people were rescued on Sunday and another 6,500 on Monday.
Dramatic images
distributed by the Italian coastguard showed children among the survivors
crammed onto an old fishing boat.
Some of the migrants
jumped off the vessel in life jackets and swam towards their rescuers.
The total number of
arrivals in Italy this year now stands at 112,500, according to the UN’s
refugee agency and the coastguard, slightly below the 116,000 recorded by the
same point in 2015.
Involved in the rescue
at dawn on Monday were the Italian coastguard and navy, and the Dignity 1 ship
operated by the NGO Doctors Without Borders (MSF), whose spokesman Nicholas
Papachrysostomou said 650 people were saved.
“Many of them had never
seen the sea before. There were elderly women on board, sick people, and
several children aged 13 or 4 who were travelling alone,” he said.
“They were fighting each
other to be rescued first, they were jumping into the water, it was hard to
control the situation.”
However, the drama was
far from over.
“At the end of the day,
the horizon was filled with boats,” Papachrysostomo told AFP, speaking by phone
from the Dignity 1.
“It was an extraordinary
day,” he added.
Another NGO, Proactiva
Open Arms, described Monday as “an endless day” and “a sad record” on its
Facebook page.
Among the survivors were
babies and small children carried by their parents.
A mother and her
premature newborn were evacuated by helicopter as soon as they had been
rescued.
On Tuesday morning, a
woman gave birth on board the rescue ship as it made its way to the Italian
coast.
She and her newborn were
taken by speedboat to the island of Lampedusa, while the rest of the migrants
made their way to several ports in Sicily, Sardinia and southern Italy.
The coastguard and MSF
said the spike in migrant arrivals was due to improved weather conditions after
a bad spell.
More than 3,100 people
have died trying to reach Europe this year.
PUNCH
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