Divers off southern Italy
have been searching the wreck of a boat which sank on Thursday drowning
more than 300 African migrants.
The fishing vessel foundered less than 1km (half a mile) from
the island of Lampedusa after it caught fire. At least 111 bodies have now been recovered and some 200 of those on board the 20m (66ft) boat are still unaccounted for.
Dozens of bodies are thought to remain in the sunken vessel.
There had been about 500 passengers on board - most from Eritrea and Somalia, according to the UN. Rescuers saved 155.
Gavin Hewitt reports from
Lampedusa on Friday morning, where locals are calling for action
The diving operation had to be
temporarily suspended due to choppy seas, Italian media reports say.
Officials are quoted as saying some 100 bodies
could remain in the wreck, which lies some 40m below the surface.
Half of the bodies so far recovered are said to be women and
four are children. A minute of silence was being observed in all Italian schools on Friday in memory of the victims and flags are at half-mast. A special mass is being held on Friday evening in the church in Lampedusa.
The skipper of the boat, a 35-year-old Tunisian, was arrested, announced Italy's Interior Minister Angelino Alfano when he visited the island on Thursday.
"He had been deported from Italy in April," Mr
Alfano said.
"This is not an Italian tragedy, this is a European tragedy,"
he continued. "Lampedusa has to be considered the frontier of Europe,
not the frontier of Italy."'Immense tragedy' The ship appears to have set sail from Misrata in Libya and began taking on water when its motor stopped working as it neared Lampedusa early on Thursday morning.
It is thought that some of those on board set fire to a piece of material to try to attract the attention of passing ships, only to have the fire spread to the rest of the boat.
The boat is thought to have capsized when everyone moved to one side.
It is one of the worst such disasters to occur off the Italian coast in recent years; Prime Minister Enrico Letta tweeted that it was "an immense tragedy".
In a separate incident on Thursday, local media reported that around 200 migrants were escorted to the port of Syracuse on the island of Sicily, when their vessel encountered difficulties five miles off the coast.
Earlier this week, 13 migrants drowned while trying to reach Sicily.
Most of those on board were from Eritrea
and Somalia
More than 100 bodies have so far been
recovered, with more thought to be located in the wreck
Interior Minister Angelino Alfano
visited the island on Thursday evening
Bodies were taken to a hangar at the
airport, because the island's mortuary couldn't cope
The mayor, Giusi Nicolini, described the scene as a "continuous horror", while a local doctor said the hardest part to deal with was seeeing the bodies of children.
An Eritrean woman who had initially been placed among the bodies on the shore was later found to be breathing and was taken to hospital in Sicily. But there is little hope of finding anyone else alive.he search was widened during Thursday beyond the initial radius of four nautical miles from Lampedusa in an effort to recover bodies that had been swept away by tides
Bodies were later taken to a hangar at the island's airport, because there was no more room at the morgue.
A ferry arrived at the island carrying dozens of coffins and several hearses.
Pope Francis, visiting Assisi, described Friday as "a day of tears" for the victims.
In July he visited the Lampedusa and condemned the "global indifference" to the plight of migrants trying to arrive there.
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