More Than 3,700 Migrants Rescued In Mediterranean

More Than 3,700 Migrants Rescued In Mediterranean
Migrants pray at the Franco-Italian border in Ventimiglia, Italy, during the holy month of Ramadan, Friday, June 19, 2015. The European Union will move ahead beginning next week on a plan to disrupt the business model of human traffickers in the Mediterranean Sea, diplomats said, speaking to the media Friday on condition of anonymity. (AP Photo/Thibault Camus)
Migrants pray at the Franco-Italian border in Ventimiglia, Italy, during the holy month of Ramadan, Friday, June 19, 2015. The European Union will move ahead beginning next week on a plan to disrupt the business model of human traffickers in the Mediterranean Sea, diplomats said, speaking to the media Friday on condition of anonymity. (AP Photo/Thibault Camus)

ROME, June 23 (Reuters) - Ships patrolling the Mediterranean have plucked more than 3,700 migrants from overcrowded and unsafe boats in the last two days, Italy's coastguard said on Tuesday.

Ships from several countries, including those taking part in a European Union mission called "Triton," went to the aid of 18 different boats carrying 2,741 migrants on Monday, a spokeswoman said.

Around a thousand more migrants were saved in six rescue operations on Tuesday, the coastguard said in a statement. They had been traveling in a fishing boat and five rubber dinghies.

Separately, almost 300 other migrants rescued two days ago arrived in the Sicilian port of Pozzallo aboard a ship run by Doctors Without Borders. Authorities also brought ashore a corpse in a metal coffin.

The victim had been shot dead by men traveling on another boat near the Libyan coast, according to testimony by the migrants, Italian media reported. A Sicilian court is investigating the death.

Italy has been trying to convince the EU to help it cope with waves of migrants arriving in overcrowded boats from North Africa, with official estimates putting the total at 60,000 so far this year. Almost 2,000 have died trying to make the crossing, the United Nations refugee agency has estimated.

The EU this year agreed to triple funding for sea rescues off the coasts of Italy and Greece, but the 28-nation bloc is deeply divided on how to manage the migrants once they come ashore.

EU leaders meet later this week to discuss a European Commission plan to distribute 40,000 Syrian and Eritrean asylum seekers, now stuck in Italy and Greece, among other EU nations.

The Commission plan also foresees creating detention centers called "hot spots" to better identify migrants and refugees and calls for those who do not qualify for asylum to be quickly deported.

With thousands of new boat arrivals each week, France is increasingly turning back migrants seeking to reach northern European countries.

Hundreds have taken shelter in or near Italy's train stations, especially in Rome and Milan. More than 100 migrants have been sleeping rough along the Italy-France border for almost two weeks. (Reporting by Steve Scherer; Editing by Gareth Jones)

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