More than 50 migrants, including nine children, have been rescued from an overcrowded boat in the central Mediterranean as humanitarian groups warn that dangerous crossings from North Africa to Europe continue despite mounting risks.
The Italian humanitarian organisation Emergency said its search-and-rescue vessel Life Support pulled the group from a small, unseaworthy boat on Friday evening after it was spotted drifting in international waters within the Libyan search and rescue zone.
The operation was the second rescue carried out by the charity on the same day. Earlier, the crew assisted another boat carrying 41 migrants, bringing the total number of people helped in the two operations to more than 90.
According to the organisation, those rescued in the latest incident included people from Nigeria, Guinea-Bissau, Senegal, South Sudan, Guinea, The Gambia and Sudan, as well as individuals identifying as being from Biafra. Nine of those on board were children, highlighting the continued presence of minors on the perilous sea route.
After the rescue, the migrants were brought aboard the Life Support ship, where medical staff and volunteers provided initial assistance, including food, water and medical checks. The vessel has since been directed to the Italian port of Civitavecchia, near Rome, where the survivors are expected to disembark after several days at sea.
The central Mediterranean crossing between North Africa and southern Europe remains one of the world’s most dangerous migration routes. Thousands of people attempt the journey each year in overcrowded wooden boats or inflatable dinghies launched from Libya or Tunisia, often organised by smuggling networks. Many vessels lack life jackets, navigation equipment or sufficient fuel.
Humanitarian groups say rescue ships have become a crucial lifeline for migrants who risk drowning while attempting to reach the European Union. The Life Support vessel, operated by Emergency since 2022, carries a specialised crew including rescuers, medics and cultural mediators and can accommodate up to around 175 rescued people at a time.
Despite these efforts, the crossing continues to claim lives. The Mediterranean has been described by aid groups as the world’s deadliest migration route, with tens of thousands of people reported dead or missing over the past decade as they attempted to reach Europe by sea.
The rescues come amid ongoing political tensions in Europe over migration policy. Several governments, including Italy’s, have introduced stricter rules for humanitarian rescue vessels, often directing them to disembark rescued migrants at distant ports. Aid organisations argue that such measures prolong journeys and limit their ability to return quickly to search-and-rescue operations in the central Mediterranean.
For many migrants, however, the risks remain secondary to the hardships they are fleeing. People making the crossing often cite conflict, political instability, poverty and lack of economic opportunity in their home countries as reasons for attempting the journey.
Friday’s rescue is the latest reminder of the steady flow of migrants leaving African shores in search of safety or opportunity in Europe — and of the continuing humanitarian challenge unfolding on the Mediterranean’s waters.
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