A migrant, who was rescued from a dinghy in the Mediterranean Sea, looks on after her arrival at Port of Malaga. Photo / Getty Images.
Spanish authorities say they have rescued 569 migrants crossing the Mediterranean from North Africa to Spain by boat.
Spain's Maritime Rescue Service says those rescued Saturday included 264 people in 16 boats in the Strait of Gibraltar, a busy shipping lane with treacherous currents.
Two men were pulled from a canoe.
Fair weather and calm seas in recent days have brought an uptick in migrants' attempts to reach the Spanish coast via the Western Mediterranean route.
Spain's new centre-left government recently announced a softer stance on migration, extending public healthcare to foreigners without residence permits.
But another rescue ship, the Lifeline of the German NGO Mission Lifeline, was stranded in the Mediterranean off Malta after both Italy and Malta refused to let it dock with its 234 migrants.
Lifeline said a merchant vessel, the Alexander Maersk, had another 113 migrants and was also waiting for a port to receive them.
Italian Deputy Prime Minister Matteo Salvini has demanded that Malta, the EU's smallest country, allow the Lifeline to dock because it was in the island's waters.
Maltese authorities on Saturday provided humanitarian assistance to the Lifeline's passengers but Maltese Premier Joseph Muscat stood firm and insisted that Malta had "no responsibility" for the rescue.
The Lifeline "should move from its position toward their original destination to prevent escalation" of the situation, Muscat tweeted.
A week ago, Spain took in 630 migrants from the French aid ship Aquarius after Malta and Italy, which were closer, refused to grant the ship access to their ports.
European Union leaders on Sunday will try to find common ground for tackling migrants arriving on Europe's shores in search of better lives — a growing political crisis threatening to undermine the entire EU project.
The leaders of about 16 countries — more than half the 28-nation bloc — will take part in what is being billed as "informal talks" in Brussels, ahead of a full EU summit on June 28-29, where migration will top the agenda.
German Chancellor Angela Merkel says the meeting involves "talking with particularly affected nations about all problems connected with migration".
The arrival of more than one million people in 2015, most fleeing conflict in Syria and Iraq, exposed glaring deficiencies in EU migrant reception capacities and asylum laws.
It has fuelled tensions among member states, and anti-migrant parties have won votes by fomenting public fears of foreigners.