The Italian coastguard searched off southern Italy Monday for survivors or the bodies of dozens of migrants feared missing, after two shipwrecks left 11 people dead, reports AFP.
With up to 60 migrants potentially lost at sea, the coastguard said it has been looking for "possible missing persons" since late Sunday, "following the shipwreck of a sailing boat with migrants on board, presumably departing from Turkey".
Rescue efforts began after "a 'mayday' from a French pleasure boat" some 120 nautical miles off the Italian coast, it said.
The French vessel alerted authorities to "the presence of the half-sunken boat", before taking 12 surviving migrants on board.
They were then transferred to an Italian coastguard boat, which took them to the town of Roccella Ionica in southern Italy.
One of the surviving 12 died after disembarking, the coastguard said.
Around 50 migrants were missing following the shipwreck, according to ANSA news agency, while Radio Radicale put the number at 64, adding that those lost at sea were from Afghanistan and Iran.
Doctors Without Borders (MSF) said it was providing "psychological assistance to all survivors".
The team had "supported first aid activities for 12 people, including a woman who died shortly after disembarkation due to her severe medical condition", it said.
- Flooded lower deck -
Further south, rescuers coming to the aid of migrants on a wooden boat off the Italian island of Lampedusa found 10 bodies below deck, the German aid group ResQship posted on X Monday.
The crew of ResQship's vessel, the Nadir, managed to pull 51 people to safety.
"The rescue came too late for 10 people," the German charity said.
"A total of 61 people were on the wooden boat, which was full of water. Our crew was able to evacuate 51 people, two of whom were unconscious -- they had to be cut free with an axe," it said.
"The 10 dead are in the flooded lower deck of the boat," it added.
The survivors hailed from Pakistan, Egypt and Syria, according to ANSA, which said they had paid around $3,500 to travel in the eight-metre (26-foot) long boat.
More than 3,150 migrants died or disappeared in the Mediterranean last year, according to the UN's International Organization for Migration.
The Central Mediterranean is the deadliest known migration route in the world, representing 80 percent of the deaths and disappearances in the Mediterranean sea.
It is widely used by migrants fleeing conflict or poverty, who set off from Tunisia or Libya by boat in bids to enter the European Union via Italy.
- Tough choice -
The EU recently adopted a vast reform toughening immigration control at its borders.
And since coming to power in 2022, far-right Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni has vowed to dramatically slash the number of people crossing by boat from the coast of North Africa.
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