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Europe’s refugee crisis
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250 migrants fleeing Libya feared dead after rubber dinghies sink in Mediterranean Sea

Aid groups say the accelerating exodus is being driven by worsening living conditions for migrants in Libya and by fears the sea route to Europe could soon be closed to traffickers

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A Libyan fisherman speeds past the remains of a migrant raft in central Mediterranean Sea off the Libyan coast during a search and rescue operation by Spanish NGO Proactiva Open Arms. Photo: Reuters
Agence France-Presse

More than 250 African migrants were feared drowned in the Mediterranean after a charity’s rescue boat found five corpses close to two sinking rubber dinghies off Libya.

The UN’s refugee agency (UNHCR) said it was “deeply alarmed” after the Golfo Azzuro, a boat operated by Spanish NGO Proactiva Open Arms, reported the recovery of the bodies close to the drifting, partially-submerged dinghies, about 20km off the Libyan coast.

“We don’t think there can be any other explanation than that these dinghies would have been full of people,” Proactiva spokeswoman Laura Lanuza said.

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“It seems clear that they sunk.”

Migrants wait to be rescued from a sinking dingey off the Libyan coast. Photo: AFP
Migrants wait to be rescued from a sinking dingey off the Libyan coast. Photo: AFP
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She added that the inflatables, of a kind usually used by people traffickers, would typically have been carrying 120-140 migrants each.

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