The victims
are thought to have suffocated after inhaling fumes from fuel after the
boat took on water in the hold, the captain of the navy ship leading the
rescue said on Italian state television.
Commander
Massimo Tozzi, speaking from the ship, said that when his men boarded
the migrant boat they found the dead in the hold "immersed in water,
fuel and human excrement".
Migrants
who have arrived in Italy say human traffickers based in lawless Libya
charge them between $1,200 and $1,800 for a place on the deck of boats.
Those crammed in the hold pay about half as much as those above.
Admiral
Pierpaolo Libuffo, head of Italy's rescue operations, told Italian
television that 312 survivors had been taken on board, including 45
women and 3 children.
He said
seven bodies of the dead had been brought aboard the navy ship and some
30 others were still in the hold. The boat was being towed to the
Italian island of Lampedusa.
Video provided by the navy showed the
blue migrant boat, which appeared to be about 20 metres long and made
of wood, was still afloat when rescuers arrived.
"Either
the international community does something to resolve the Libyan
situation or this will not be the last tragedy," Interior Minister
Angelino Alfano said.
It was
the second such fatal incident in the Mediterranean this week, during
which about 2,000 migrants have been rescued. Last Tuesday, up to 50
migrants went missing when a large rubber dinghy sank in the
Mediterranean Sea.
Around 200 migrants were presumed killed earlier this month off the coast of Libya when their boat capsized
The Mediterranean has become the world's most deadly crossing point for migrants.
More
than 2,300 people fleeing war and poverty have died this year in
attempts to reach Europe by boat, compared with 3,279 deaths during the
whole of last year, the International Organisation for Migration said.
The
Geneva-based organisation said the number of migrants who have crossed
the Mediterranean so far this year is approaching a quarter of a
million, compared with 219,000 for all of last year.
More than 100,000 have arrived in Italy so far this year, Alfano said.
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