ROME, May 3, 2015:
More than 3,400 migrants were rescued at
 sea Saturday, mainly off Libya, as Europe seeks ways to deal with the 
flood of people trying to reach its shores following a series of deadly 
shipwrecks.
While they said it was a “very busy 
day”, it was not a record for the coast guard, which coordinated the 
rescue of 3,791 migrants on April 12 and another 2,850 the following 
day.
French patrol boat Commandant Birot, 
which was sent to boost EU patrols to deal with the influx of migrant 
boats in the Mediterranean, picked up 217 people off the coast of Libya.
The migrants, all men, had been on board
 three boats, the authorities said, adding that two suspected people 
smugglers were also caught and would be handed over to Italian police.
In
 Italy, the coast guard announced late at night that 16 vessels had 
rescued a total of 3,427 people on Saturday alone in an operation 
coordinated from their headquarters in Rome.
In addition to the French patrol boat, 
the rescue operation mobilised four Italian coast guard ships, two 
Italian navy vessels, two cargo ships, two Italian customs ships and two
 tugs.
Most notably, the navy said on Twitter 
that the frigate Bersagliere had rescued 778 migrants while the patrol 
boat Vega had picked up another 675.
Some of the rescued migrants were 
expected to arrive overnight on the Italian island of Lampedusa, the 
closest to the African coast, while most of the others are expected to 
arrive in Sicily or southern Italy on Sunday night.
According to the Italian coast guard, the French patrol vessel should land its migrants at a port in Calabria.
Aid group launches rescue ship
Hundreds of migrants, mostly African but
 also many Syrians escaping the war at home, land every day on the 
Italian coast after being rescued by the Italian navy or coast guard.
Following a series of shipwrecks which 
killed more than 1,200 people in April, European leaders at an 
extraordinary summit on April 23 agreed to strengthen the EU presence at
 sea in a bid to halt the tidal wave of refugees trying to reach Europe.
They decided to triple funding for the 
Triton operation, run by the Frontex border agency, which was previously
 three million euros (US$3.4 million (RM12 million) a month.
Triton was launched in November 2014 to 
supplant the more ambitious Italian “Mare Nostrum” (“Our Sea”) rescue 
operation launched a year earlier.
The EU is also seeking UN support to combat the smugglers who thrive on the chaotic situation in Libya.
Possible intervention is complicated by 
the situation in the North African country where two governments and 
Parliaments are vying for power.
Humanitarian organisations argue for a 
better reception for refugees fleeing war and stress that even if the 
international community was able to close the Libyan route, another 
would open elsewhere.
Europe’s only non-governmental rescue 
vessel set sail on Saturday from Malta on a six-month mission to reduce 
the number of migrant deaths in the Mediterranean.
The MV Phoenix, which last year saved 
3,000 lives in just two months, will face an even tougher mission this 
year because of the spike in migrant crossings, said Martin Xuereb, 
director of the Migrant Offshore Aid Station (MOAS).
MOAS has teamed up with Medecins Sans 
Frontieres (MSF — Doctors without Borders) to operate the 40m vessel 
which is equipped with a state-of-the-art drone that will be used to 
locate migrant vessels.
It is the only private ship engaged in 
the operation, although the coast guard regularly calls on passing 
freighters to rescue migrants when no other vessel is in close by.
Source : http://www.therakyatpost.com/world/2015/05/03/more-than-3400-migrants-rescued-at-sea-in-mediterranean/