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1,500 migrants rescued off Libya coast

Italian navy says seven operations rescued the migrants from boats, after a break in bad weather sparked fresh attempts at the crossing to Europe
Italian navy destroyer Luigi Durand De La in the Mediterranean on 1 October, 2015 (AFP)

More than 1,500 migrants and refugees have been rescued off the Libyan coast in seven separate operations, the Italian navy has said, after a break in bad weather sparked fresh attempts at the perilous Mediterranean crossing.

The migrants were plucked from their boats by the Italian coastguard, the navy, a Doctors Without Borders boat and two vessels operating under the EU's Operation Sophia, which patrols the sea for people smugglers.

The rescue, reported on Thursday, followed a lull in arrivals caused by bad weather, during which only around 400 migrants were picked up in over 10 days - a startlingly low number compared to the summer months, when an average of 760 people a day were rescued.

According to the UN, the number of migrants crossing the Mediterranean to Europe fell by more than a third last month, due also to a Turkish crackdown on traffickers in the Aegean on the route into Greece.

The International Organisation for Migration estimated in late November that nearly 860,000 migrants had landed in Europe so far this year, with more than 3,500 dying while crossing the Mediterranean in search of safety.

On Tuesday, the UN's children's agency warned that women and children make up an increasing proportion of the migrants and refugees on the move, and currently account for more than half, up from just 27 percent a few months ago.

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