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European Commission agrees Hollande call for summit on Med migrant crisis

The French president urged a meeting of foreign, interior ministers after drownings of about 700 EU-bound migrants off Libya this weekend.

La rédaction de Mediapart

This article is freely available.

The European Commission on Sunday took up French President François Hollande's call for a meeeting of foreign and interior ministers after the shipwreck in the Mediterranean that is feared to have cost the lives of about 700 migrants, reports Radio France Internationale.

Hollande called for "more boats, more aerial surveillance and a much tougher fight against traffickers".

If the feared death toll is confirmed the disaster will be the "worst catastrophe in recent years", Hollande told Canal+ TV during a three-hour interview.

The 28 survivors have indicated that about 700 people were on board the boats that went down near the Libyan coast.

Two other shipwrecks this week left an estimated 450 people dead.

Europe must act to end the mass drownings, Hollande said and he called for the people who organise the voyages to be tracked down "because those who put these people on boats are traffickers, terrorists even, because they know these boats are lousy... and put hundreds of people in danger".

Later in the day the European Commission announced that a ministers' meeting would take place, although it did not give a date.

It will prepare a new European migration strategy to be adopted in mid-May, a statement said.

Read more of this report from RFI.