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DISASTER MANAGEMENT
EU to step up action against Mediterranean people smugglers
by Staff Writers
Brussels (AFP) Sept 1, 2015


Cape Verde avoids major damage as Hurricane Fred moves on
Bissau (AFP) Sept 1, 2015 - Hurricane Fred headed away from the West African archipelago of Cape Verde on Tuesday, causing no deaths, a day after slamming it with winds of up to 140 kilometres (85 miles)per hour, local officials said.

It was the first hurricane strike on Cape Verde, a group of 10 volcanic islands located 500 kilometres (300 miles) off Senegal, since 1892, US weather experts have said.

"At around 5 a.m. today, the hurricane's speed abated to the point of becoming a tropical storm," Efemio Brito, the head of the national weather institute INMG, told national radio.

Tropical storms pack winds of up 117 kph.

Fred, a category one hurricane on the five-point Saffir-Simpson scale, had moved away from Santo Antao island and was on Tuesday headed in a north-westerly direction.

Arlindo Lima, the head of the 10-island archipelago's civil protection service, said there had been property damage but no deaths.

He said strong winds had uprooted trees and electricity poles on the island of Sao Nicolau but "there has been no loss of human life and that's good news for us."

The EU is preparing to step up action against people smugglers in the Mediterranean, actively seizing the boats which carry thousands of hapless migrants to Europe, officials said Tuesday.

The 28-nation EU launched the first, intelligence gathering phase of its EU NavFor Med operation in July and the commander Admiral Enrico Crendendino believes it is now time for the next step as the crisis deepens, they said.

"Based on his military assessment, (Crendendino) presented a proposal to move to the second phase of the operation," said Catherine Ray, spokeswoman for EU foreign policy chief Federica Mogherini.

Such action would still be confined to the high seas, in line with international law, she noted.

Ray added that Mogherini supported Crendendino's recommendation, which will be discussed by EU defence ministers on Thursday and then by the 28-nation bloc's foreign ministers at informal meetings in Luxembourg on Friday and Saturday.

Mogherini will chair both meetings as the European Union searches desperately for a solution to the flood of migrants fleeing war and turmoil across the Middle East and beyond.

"At this stage, there are frankly no reservations about moving on to this (second phase)," an EU diplomatic source told AFP.

"There is a group of countries who are clearly in favour" of proceeding, said another EU diplomatic source while a third cautioned that a "clearer case needs to be made" for action.

A third phase in the plan, agreed by EU leaders in May after more than 700 migrants drowned off southern Italy, allows EU NavFor Med to take military action against the people smugglers inside Libyan territorial waters, aiming to destroy their boats before they set sail.

This step however requires at a minimum a UN Security Council resolution and preferably Libyan government agreement.

EU efforts to help establish a national unity government in Libya have so far failed and there has been little mention of the UN resolution for some time.

EU NavFor Med currently comprises four ships -- one Italian, one British and two German -- and would likely need several more vessels for the enlarged mission.


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