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NGO rescue fleet demands Europe resume rescue missions after 40 people are feared to have drowned
Rescued migrants rest near the city of Al Khoms, around 75 miles east of Tripoli

THE civil migrant rescue fleet demanded that the EU resume its search and rescue operations in the Mediterranean today as about 40 refugees were feared to have drowned while attempting to flee Libya yesterday. 
 
A boat with over 100 migrants left the Libyan coast near the city of Al Khums late on Monday night. At 3.30am yesterday someone on board contacted Alarm Phone, a charity which provides independent support for people crossing the Mediterranean. 
 
“They were in severe distress, crying and shouting, telling us that people had died already.” The charity wrote on its Twitter feed.  
 
“We tried to get their GPS position but the people were in such panic that they could not retrieve it. As the boat was still very close to the Libyan coast, we had no other option but to inform authorities in Libya and Italy. We think nobody went out to look for them.”
 
The EU-funded Libyan coastguard told the charity it had found the shipwrecked and brought the survivors to safety. 
 
Doctors Without Borders (MSF) confirmed yesterday it was on the scene as the bodies came ashore. Among the victims of the shipwreck was a family: mother, father and child, MSF said. 
 
“For them it was too late. Our medics couldn’t do anything but help the authorities by providing body bags.
 
“While our MSF teams were at the disembarkation point in Al Khoms, they were informed that another rubber boat had left and was already spotted 60 miles far off Misrata.
 
“Lives are at risk every day that people continue to flee Libya by the sea. Proactive and sufficient European search and rescue capacity is urgently needed in the central Mediterranean.”
 
The UN High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) agency estimates that “some 900 people have lost their lives attempting to cross the Mediterranean” this year.
 
UNCHR spokesman Charley Yaxley called for “renewed efforts to reduce the loss of life at sea, including a return of EU state search and rescue vessels. 
 
“Legal and logistical restrictions on NGO search and rescue operations, both at sea and in the air, should be lifted. Coastal states should facilitate, not impede, voluntary efforts to reduce deaths at sea.

“These measures should go hand in hand with increased evacuation and resettlement places from states to move refugees in Libya out of harm’s way.”

Meanwhile the Mare Juno, a rescue ship operated by the Italian NGO Mediterranea: Saving Humans rescued 100 people, including eight pregnant women, this morning. 

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