On the eve of a European Union summit, French Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius joined Spain in calling for better border surveillance but also raised deeper questions of African poverty driving the migration.
"The Mediterranean has become a kind of open-air cemetery," Fabius told a news conference after a forum in Barcelona of 10 European and North African countries bordering the Mediterranean.
Weeks after a boat carrying migrants sank off Italy, killing over 300 people, Fabius warned that the situation was now "dramatic" and said France had specific proposals it wanted to be adopted at the EU summit.
"Then there is the question of protection," he said.
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Fabius urged a strengthening of the European border control agency Frontex, which he has previously described as underfunded with an annual budget of 50-60 million euros.
The French minister called for reinforced surveillance and noted proposals for the creation of a task force against people smugglers after Italy launched a giant sea patrol operation in mid-October.
Spanish Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy, too, called for new efforts to curb the wave of migration.
"Control of the European Union's external borders is an effort that must be shared by the whole union, member states and institutions."
A forum of foreign ministers yesterday in the northeastern Spanish city brought together France, Italy, Malta, Portugal and Spain with five North African states: Algeria, Libya, Morocco, Mauritania and Tunisia.
On Tuesday, Italian Prime Minister Enrico Letta urged EU leaders to adopt an action plan to deal with the "immigration emergency".