European Union leaders, under pressure to act to stop more migrants dying in the Mediterranean, will agree at a crisis summit tomorrow to boost search and rescue operations and step up the fight against traffickers.

Public outrage over the death of up to 900 migrants last Sunday when their boat sank on its way to Europe from Libya has led EU governments to reverse last year's decision to scale down search and rescue operations in the Mediterranean.

The leaders are expected to agree in Brussels on reinforcing EU operations in the Mediterranean, probably by doubling the cash and equipment available to two EU border patrol missions, a senior EU diplomat said.

Their area of operations will also be extended, meaning EU ships would be better placed to spot and rescue migrant boats in trouble off the North African coast.

Amnesty International volunteers place hundreds of paper boats with the writing "SOS Europe" on the beach of San Sebastian in Barcelona. They called on the EU to highlight the migration crisis in the Mediterranean. Photo: Gustau Nacarino, ReutersAmnesty International volunteers place hundreds of paper boats with the writing "SOS Europe" on the beach of San Sebastian in Barcelona. They called on the EU to highlight the migration crisis in the Mediterranean. Photo: Gustau Nacarino, Reuters

"Our overriding priority is to prevent more people from dying at sea," European Council President Donald Tusk said in his invitation letter to the leaders.

The EU has struggled for years to forge an effective joint strategy to handle migrants fleeing war and turmoil in Africa and the Middle East despite repeated tragedies at sea.

"The stakes are very high. EU heads of state have the responsibility of the region's human rights credibility on their shoulders and they need to take firm action to save lives," Iverna McGowan, head of rights group Amnesty International's Brussels office, told a news conference.

Prime Minister Matteo Renzi of Italy, which has borne the brunt of caring for thousands of desperate migrants, said today the EU must take a collective stand to tackle human trafficking at source in African countries.

Last year Italy closed Mare Nostrum, a sea rescue mission that had saved the lives of more than 100,000 migrants, despite warnings from activists at the time that this would mean more deaths. The mission was replaced with a smaller EU scheme whose main focus was to patrol the bloc's borders.

TARGETING TRAFFICKERS

Some EU countries, including Germany and Britain, were worried that the search and rescue mission would encourage more migrants to take to rickety boats.

One of the proposals the European Commission will submit tomorrow envisages a military and civilian mission to capture and destroy the traffickers' boats.

"We know where the boats are, where the smugglers gather together the people who are fleeing," Italian Defence Minister Roberta Pinotti told Italy's SkyTG24 television.

The leaders will also discuss a pilot project to resettle 5,000 to 10,000 refugees from Mediterranean countries to other EU states, the senior diplomat said.

Nkosazana Dlamini Zuma, head of the African Union Commission, said in Brussels today that African nations must increase jobs and educational opportunities to discourage young Africans from leaving for Europe.

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