By MarEx 2015-05-14 17:18:43
Almost 3,600 migrants have been rescued from overcrowded boats sailing from Africa to Europe over the past 48 hours, Italy said on Thursday, with sea conditions seen as perfect for attempting the crossing.
As more than 600 migrants were brought ashore at the port of Catania in Sicily, rescuers plucked another 2,500 from rickety boats off the coast of Libya, the coast guard said.
Most of those who arrived in Catania had been picked up by the British warship HMS Bulwark and were Somali and Nigerian, port officials said.
With Libya engulfed in strife, people smugglers are increasingly free to pack migrants onto unsafe boats, and they are expected to push total arrivals in Italy for 2015 to 200,000, an increase of 30,000 on last year, according to an Interior Ministry projection.
Sandra Dike, a heavily pregnant 20-year-old Nigerian woman, said she left her home country because of the danger of attacks by the armed Islamist group Boko Haram.
“It’s not safe to go to a public place, like a church, the market. They (Boko Haram) might bomb the place at any time,” she said. “The war in Libya is worse. That’s why we decided to come to Italy.”
Boko Haram, which has killed thousands in its attempt to carve out an Islamist state, has suffered major setbacks this year following a coordinated military offensive by Nigeria, Niger, Chad and Cameroon.
A German ship, Italian navy vessels, a merchant ship, and Italy’s finance police and coast guard all conducted rescue operations on Thursday, a coast guard official stated.
The 40-metre Phoenix, based in Malta and run by the Migrant Offshore Aid Station (MOAS) and Doctors Without Borders, rescued 561 people, including 136 women and 60 children, mostly from Eritrea. The ship picked up 188 people on Wednesday.
The surge in rescues comes just a day after the European Union announced a plan to distribute asylum-seekers more fairly around its member states and take in 20,000 more refugees.
At the beginning of the month when the weather also was favorable, about 6,800 people were rescued over three days, while dozens were said to have drowned.
Alarming Statistics for 2014
According to the International Organization for Migration 2014 saw the death of almost 5,000 migrants. The majority of these deaths, around 70 percent, occurred in the Mediterranean Sea; this number is four-times higher than it was in 2014. The organization has similarly estimated that over 22,000 migrants have died over the past 15 trying to reach Europe.
This year is already looking to be on par with or exceed the numbers for 2014. Already 2015 has seen the deaths of close to 2,000 migrants at sea, with over 800 dying in a single accident last month. The EU has reinforced its Triton sea mission in order to help Italy carry out rescues and mitigate the loss of life in the Mediterranean.
This post was sourced from Maritime Executive: View original article here.