"We will never know exact numbers," Medecins San Frontieres said in a
Tweet after estimating that 900 had died during the week. The United
Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) said more than 700 had
drowned.
Migrants
are seen on a capsizing boat before a rescue operation by Italian navy
ships "Bettica" and "Bergamini" (unseen) off the coast of Libya in this
handout picture released by the Italian Marina Militare on May 25, 2016.
At least 700 migrants may have died at sea this past week in the busiest week of migrant crossings from Libya towards Italy this year, Medecins San Frontieres and the UN Refugee agency said on Sunday.
About
14,000 have been rescued since Monday amid calm seas, and there have
been at least three confirmed instances of boats sinking. But the number
of dead can only be estimated based on survivor testimony, which is
still being collected.
"We will never know exact numbers,"
Medecins San Frontieres said in a Tweet after estimating that 900 had
died during the week. The United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees
(UNHCR) said more than 700 had drowned.
Migrants
interviewed on Saturday in the Sicilian port of Pozzallo told of a large
fishing boat that overturned and sank on Thursday with many women and
children on board.
Initial estimates were that 400
people died, but the UN Refugee agency said on Sunday there may have
been about 670 passengers on board.
According to
testimony collected by EU border agency Frontex, when the motorless
fishing boat capsized, 25 swam to the boat that had been towing it,
while 79-89 others were saved by rescuers and 15 bodies were recovered.
This meant more than 550 died, the UNHCR said.
The
migrants -- fleeing wars, oppression and poverty -- often do not know
how to swim and do not have life jackets. They pay hundreds or thousands
of dollars to make the crossing from Libya to Italy, by far the most
dangerous border passage for migrants in the world.
This
week's arrivals included Eritreans, Sudanese, Nigerians and many other
West Africans, humanitarian groups say. Despite the surge this week, as
of Friday 40,660 arrivals had been counted, 2 percent fewer than the
same period of last year, the Interior Ministry said.
Most
of the boats this week appear to have left from Sabratha, Libya, where
many said smugglers had beaten them and women said they had been raped,
said MSF, which has three rescue boats in the area.
The
migrants are piled onto flimsy rubber boats or old fishing vessels
which can toss their occupants into the sea in a matter of seconds.
About 100 are thought to have either been trapped in the hull or to have drowned after tumbling into the sea on Wednesday.
On
Friday, the Italian Navy ship Vega collected 45 bodies and rescued 135
from a "half submerged" rubber boat. It is not yet known exactly how
many were on board, but the rubber boats normally carry about 300.
"Some were more shaken than others because they had lost their loved ones,"
Raffaele Martino, commander of the Vega, told Reuters on Sunday in the
southern port of Reggio Calabria, where the Vega docked with the
survivors and corpses, including those of three infants.
"It's
time that Europe had the courage to offer safe alternatives that allow
these people to come without putting their own lives or those of their
children in danger," Tommaso Fabri of MSF Italy said.
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