Italian
navy rescues over 1,000 migrants from boats in 24 hours
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[January 03, 2014]
ROME (Reuters) — The Italian navy
rescued more than 1,000 migrants in the 24 hours to Friday from boats
trying to reach Europe, authorities said, as an immigration crisis that
killed hundreds in the last year showed no signs of easing.
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Navy helicopters spotted four overcrowded boats struggling to stay
afloat south of Sicily on Thursday and ships were sent to save them,
the navy said in a statement.
The 823 men, women and children aboard the four vessels were from
countries including Egypt, Pakistan, Iraq and Tunisia.
The navy rescued 233 migrants from Eritrea, Nigeria, Somalia,
Zambia, Mali and Pakistan in a separate operation and took them to a
port near Syracuse on Sicily's eastern coast.
Following an October shipwreck in which 366 Eritrean migrants
drowned off the Italian island of Lampedusa, Italy launched a
special operation combining ships, helicopters and drones to monitor
the Mediterranean Sea.
Italy is a major gateway into Europe for many migrants seeking a
better life, and sea arrivals to the country from Northern Africa
more than tripled in 2013, fueled by refugees in Syria's civil war
and strife in the Horn of Africa.
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Over the past two decades, Italy, Greece and the Mediterranean
island of Malta have the brunt of the migrant flows and have urged a
coordinated European Union response.
(Reporting by Naomi O'Leary; editing by Jon Boyle)
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