Two of 51 people rescued between Libya and Lampedusa were unconscious and had to be “cut free with an axe”, a German aid group says.
At least 17 people have died and about 60 are missing – including many children – after two ships were wrecked off the coast of southern Italy.
A rescue ship run by a German aid group picked up 51 people thought to be migrants from a sinking wooden vessel in the first of two shipwrecks.
RESQSHIP said two of the 51 were unconscious and had to be “cut free with an axe”.
Ten bodies were found trapped on the wooden ship’s flooded lower deck near the Italian island of Lampedusa, the organisation added. No one is believed to be missing.
“Our thoughts are with their families. We are angry and sad,” RESQSHIP wrote on X.
Those on board came from Syria, Egypt, Pakistan and Bangladesh, the Organisation for Migration and UNICEF said in a joint statement.
The survivors were handed over to the Italian coastguard and taken ashore, RESQSHIP said.
Its own ship, the Nadir, towed the wooden boat containing the bodies of the deceased to Lampedusa.
Entire families presumed dead in second wreck
The second shipwreck took place about 125 miles east of the Italian region of Calabria, after a yacht that had set off from Turkey eight days earlier caught fire and overturned, UN agencies said.
Twelve migrants, including a pregnant woman and two children, were picked up, the Italian coastguard said.
A woman among them, who is thought to have fallen into the water, died immediately after landing.
Six bodies were later found off Calabria by the Italian Coast Guard, Sky News understands.