A rescue ship docked in Sicily with 606 migrants picked up in less than two days off the Libyan coast.
According to Aid group SOS Méditerranée, the migrants are from over 20 different countries in Africa and the Middle East. They include 241 children and 11 pregnant women.
Many of the women from sub-Saharan Africa said they had suffered sexual abuse. Some of the migrants are malnourished, the group reports. Fifty had fled to Libya from war-torn Syria. But violence also plagues Libya. The flow of irregular migrants to southern Europe via the Mediterranean is well below the 2016 level.
At the moment, Italy is struggling to cope, as most migrants now take the perilous central Mediterranean route from Libya. The Syrians taken aboard the Aquarius rescue ship include entire families and two women in the ninth month of pregnancy. The ship is now in Palermo, where the migrants face a long screening process, to determine who among them can legitimately claim asylum.
The migrants’ countries of origin include Egypt, Sudan, Eritrea, Mali, Ivory Coast, Guinea Bissau, Nigeria, Ghana, The Gambia and Yemen. SOS Méditerranée said the proportion of children rescued – about four in every 10 migrants was the highest to date