Nearly 1,500 migrants rescued in Mediterranean in two days

A migrant child is tearful after disembarking from the MV Aquarius at the Sicilian port of Messina on May 14, 2018. (AFP)
Updated 26 May 2018
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Nearly 1,500 migrants rescued in Mediterranean in two days

ROME: Around 1,500 migrants were rescued in the Mediterranean on Thursday and Friday in operations involving the Italian navy and ships chartered by NGOs and the EU border agency Frontex, the Italian coast guard said.
On Friday alone, seven separate operations picked up 1,050 people as they tried to make the crossing to Europe. The operations were coordinated by the Italian coast guard.
The German NGOs Sea-Watch and Sea-Eye said they had rescued nearly half the total picked up — 450 — from three overcrowded vessels.
As the occupants of the third boat were being picked up, a Libyan patrol boat came on the scene prompting some of the migrants to jump into the water to avoid being taken back to Libya. The Libyan vessel, however, maintained its distance and all the migrants were rescued by the two NGOs.
In recent months the Libyan coast guard has taken responsibility for a growing number of rescue operations, subsequently returning those rescued to Libya.
On Thursday, an Italian navy ship rescued 69 migrants, while a Portuguese navy boat taking part in Frontex’s anti-trafficking Triton Operation rescued 296 more.
The new arrivals are in addition to 10,800 migrants already registered in Italy since the start of the year, according to International Organization for Migration (IOM) figures.
The figure is around 80 percent lower than in the same period last year, largely attributed to agreements reached between Italy and Libyan authorities and militias.
The Libyan coast guard intercepted more than 6,500 migrants in the same period, IOM figures showed, while 383 people were reported dead or missing off Libya.


Sri Lanka court orders 84 Iranian sailors’s bodies be handed to Iran embassy, local media says

Updated 11 March 2026
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Sri Lanka court orders 84 Iranian sailors’s bodies be handed to Iran embassy, local media says

COLOMBO: A Sri Lankan court ​has ordered that the bodies of 84 sailors killed in an attack ‌on an Iranian ‌warship ​off ‌the ⁠island ​nation’s coast ⁠last week be handed over to the embassy of Iran, ⁠local media ‌reported ‌on Wednesday.
The warship, ​IRIS ‌Dena, was ‌hit by a torpedo from a US submarine in ‌the Indian Ocean while it ⁠was ⁠returning from a naval exercise organized by India, amid the US-Israeli war on Iran.