Two dead as over 700 migrants rescued in Mediterranean
Two women died of hypothermia during an 
operation to rescue more than 730 migrants off the Libyan coast, the 
Italian coast guard and medical charity Medecins Sans Frontieres said on
 Sunday.
The women were found unconscious in a large dinghy in the Mediterranean that was partly deflated and taking on water.
“Devastatingly…, two women died of 
hypothermia despite huge efforts from the #Aquarius team. We are 
heartbroken, again,” said MSF on Twitter, referring to the Aquarius 
rescue boat chartered by themselves and another charity, SOS 
Mediterranee.
Five large inflatable dinghies and five 
smaller boats were rescued during the operation which took place over a 
24-hour period Saturday to Sunday.
Among those rescued were several families with young children from Aleppo, Syria’s war-torn second city.
The rescued migrants were en route to Italy on Sunday.
Italy has already seen more than 173,000
 migrants arrive on its shores this year, up 12 percent on the 2015 
total and outstripping the previous record of 170,000 from 2014.
The increasing risks of attempting the 
perilous journey across the Mediterranean from Africa to Europe during 
poor winter weather has in the past provoked a reduction in the number 
of boats setting sail at this time of year.
But while the number of rescue boats 
patrolling the seas reduces during winter, the number of boats making 
the crossing has abated little.
According to the United Nations, at 
least 4,700 people have died or disappeared this year while trying to 
cross the Mediterranean in boats that are often overcrowded and barely 
seaworthy.
AFP
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