Yesterday, the Italian coast guard ship Diciotti discovered 11 bodies on a boat which had run into difficulty, while a commercial vessel intervening at another boat found three dead.
The Aquarius, a relief vessel chartered by the NGOs SOS Mediterranee and Doctors Without Borders (MSF), meanwhile, said efforts to resuscitate two women found on a dinghy had failed.
"Two women died of hypothermia in spite of the colossal efforts of the team. We are heartbroken, again," MSF said on Twitter.
A turn in the weather over winter usually slows departures, but the pace has remained steady this year while the number of NGO vessels patrolling off Libya has dropped sharply.
A total of 285 migrants were rescued on Saturday, 791 yesterday and 231 today.
All were packed into small wooden boats or inflatable dinghies which often begin to sink after just a few hours at sea.
Among those pulled to safety were a number of Syrian families travelling with young children. Most of the over 173,000 migrants who have arrived this year in Italy have come from West Africa and the Horn of Africa.
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