Over 300 migrants dead or missing in Mediterranean over past two days

Migration organisation says number brings to over 4,500 who have died or disappeared this year

Migrants in a dinghy boat ask for help off the coast of the Italian island of Lampedusa. File photograph: Patrick Bar/SOS Mediterranee via AP
Migrants in a dinghy boat ask for help off the coast of the Italian island of Lampedusa. File photograph: Patrick Bar/SOS Mediterranee via AP

About 340 migrants have died or gone missing in four Mediterranean Sea shipwrecks over the past two and a half days, a migration organisation says.

Another 580 people were pulled from overcrowded boats.

Flavio Di Giacomo, Italy spokesman for the International Organisation for Migration, said that brings to over 4,500 the number of migrants who have died or disappeared so far this year making the risky sea voyage, the deadliest year on record.

He said the recent toll includes a rescue overnight by Doctors Without Borders of 27 migrants, who reported that more than 130 people had been on board their rubber dinghy when it sank. Seven bodies were recovered.

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Mr Di Giacomo said the toll is increasing this year as smugglers are forcing departures despite rough winter seas.

On Monday a rubber boat ripped and flipped over with about 150 on board, UN refugee agency spokesman Iosta Ibba quoted some of the 15 survivors as saying when they arrived in Catania on Sicily’s east coast.

“The survivors made it by hanging on to the pieces of the boat that stayed afloat,” Mr Ibba said. “They were in the water for several hours, some said about 10 hours, before an oil tanker picked them up.”

On Tuesday, 23 people were brought to safety by another tanker after a rubber dinghy carrying about 122 deflated, said SOS Mediterranee, which operates rescue ship Aquarius. Four bodies were recovered.

“We waited in the water, grabbing hold of whatever floated, but most people drowned, including my little brother. He was 15 years old,” one survivor in apparent shock told the Aquarius crew.

Almost 500 migrants arrived at the port of Catania on Wednesday, including those from Monday’s shipwreck, as the influx of refugees heading to Europe showed no signs of abating.

Hundreds of people, mostly men from sub-Saharan Africa, huddled under grey blankets on the deck of the Italian coastguard vessel Diciotti as they started to disembark in pouring rain.

There were a record 27,383 arrivals in Italy in October, according to the interior ministry. As of November 16th, arrivals were already more than double the same month last year amid worsening sea conditions.

Some 167,000 migrants have reached Italy by boat so far this year, exceeding the total for all of 2015 which stood at 154,000, and quickly approaching 2014’s record of 170,000.

Italy has borne the brunt of new arrivals since the implementation in March of an agreement between Turkey and the European Union for Turkey to curb the flow of migrants and refugees sailing from its shores to reach Greece