2,800 Migrants Rescued in the Mediterranean in Two Days

Some 2,800 migrants were rescued off the Italian coast this last weekend, bringing the total number of arrivals this year to over 15,000, the International Organization for Migration (IOM) reports.

Rescuers found a dead body in one of the boats. The victim may have been suffocated by the fumes of the boat’s engine, but authorities still need to investigate this death. The majority of these migrants come from Libya and are sub-Saharan Africans, Eritreans, Syrians, Somalis and Ethiopians, according to IOM.

The migrants were rescued during different operations by the Italian Coast Guard, the Italian Navy and commercial ships. Many of them have already been brought to Lampedusa, Augusta, Messina, Porto Empedocle and Calabria.

This is the second weekend in a row that large numbers of migrants have been rescued in the Channel of Sicily. During the first weekend of April, Italy saved some 2,000 migrants as a result of several seaborne operations.

”Saving lives remains the top priority,” IOM Director General William Lacy Swing said. ”The work of Italy’s maritime forces in rescuing at sea thousands of migrants seeking safety in Europe is heroic: IOM commends this work, carried out by the Italian Coast Guard with the support of the Italian Navy and of many commercial ships.”

The majority of operations are currently carried out by Italy, in international waters, while the EU-led Triton operation – while always active – is less involved, since it is still patrolling the area within 30 miles of the Italian coast, far from the area where boats in distress actually need to be helped.

Last week the Italian Ministry of Interior released new data on migrant arrivals through the end of March 2015. In the first three months of the year Italy registered a total of 10,165 migrants arriving on its shores – a slight drop in the number of arrivals recorded during the same period in 2014.

The migrants who arrived yesterday reported that during the month of March the arrivals decreased because of bad weather conditions. Many of the migrants have been waiting to depart for over a month inside so-called ”connection houses,” where they often become victims of brutal violence and abuse perpetrated by the smugglers, IOM says.

”It is clear that migration flows from Libya will continue,” said Ambassador Swing. ”We therefore believe that rescue at sea operations should be supported through a more efficient and concerted EU approach. At the same time, as we have said in the past, more must be done to identify these unscrupulous smugglers and to persecute them. We must crack down on these criminal networks.”

Image: IOM