Lorient, France - Defence ministers from five EU countries will meet Sunday for talks on a military campaign to stop human trafficking and reinforce the region's defences against the flow of migrants from North Africa.
Officials from France, Germany, Poland, Italy and Spain will use events commemorating the 70th anniversary of the liberation of Lorient, western France, to discuss how to battle the new threat facing Europe that has already cost thousands of lives.
The ministers are also expected to discuss Europe's common defence strategy as well as the crash on Saturday of the new Airbus A400M military plane in Spain during a test flight which left four dead.
The first fatal incident involving the new troop and vehicle transporter led Britain, Germany and Turkey to ground their planes, while France said it was keeping its fleet of six in the air.
After some of the most deadly migrant shipwrecks ever seen in the Mediterranean this year, the ministers "will examine possible options for European (military) action," according to the French defence ministry.
More than 5,000 refugees have died over the past 18 months as boats operated by smugglers have capsized off Libya's coast, triggering alarm among European leaders seeking to halt the flow.
European Union foreign policy chief Federica Mogherini is set to present a plan to the United Nations Security Council on Monday that would see the UN lead military operations against the people smugglers.
The most controversial option under discussion would set out to destroy the boats used by the traffickers before they are loaded with migrants and sent out on the perilous journey to European shores.
Most set sail from the lawless shores of Libya, where the breakdown of government since the ouster of Moamer Kadhafi has allowed ruthless people traffickers to operate with impunity.
AFP