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Italy divers recover more refugee bodies from shipwreck

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AFP Lampedusa (Italy)
Divers in Italy recovered 17 more bodies today from a shipwreck in which over 300 African asylum seekers may have died, as EU states prepared to address the growing refugee crisis.

Hundreds of rescuers and army personnel have been deployed to the island of Lampedusa whose seas were described as a "giant cemetery", with 211 bodies now pulled from the water.

A fishing boat packed with around 500 Eritrean and Somali migrants capsized and sank on Thursday after its captain set fire to a T-shirt to signal distress to coast guards, sparking panic on board.

The boat was within sight of the shore but many could not swim and survivors spoke of being in waters thick with fuel oil that spilled from the wreck for hours before help came.
 

Emergency services managed to save 155 people.

Many of the traumatised Eritrean survivors are living in unsanitary conditions in an overcrowded refugee centre, while the bodies are being stored in rows of coffins in a giant airport hangar.

Divers have described the horrific sight of the bodies trapped in the wreck under water at a depth of around 50 metres, many still in the contorted poses in which they drowned.

"There are a lot of young people. You imagine seeing your own children. It is really a tragic scene," said Angelo Vesto, an army officer responsible for transporting the black body bags.

European interior ministers are to discuss the influx of asylum-seekers at talks in Luxembourg tomorrow and EU Commission president Jose Manuel Barroso will travel to Lampedusa on Wednesday.

Barroso's office said the Commission remained committed to "further measures and concrete actions" to help the refugees and the member states taking them in, as well as third countries.

Italian Prime Minister Enrico Letta has asked for more European assistance but has also blamed the lax border controls in Libya, the departure point for many of the boats, including the latest shipwrecked vessel.

Some 30,000 asylum-seekers have landed in Italy so far this year -- more than four times the number from 2012, although still below the 50,000 in 2011 at the height of the Arab Spring revolts.

The majority are Eritrean, Somalis and Syrians.

Most arrivals come to Lampedusa, Italy's southernmost point, an island of just 20 square kilometres and one of the biggest gateways for irregular migration to Europe.

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First Published: Oct 07 2013 | 6:42 PM IST

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