Another 24 bodies were recovered from an overturned fishing boat off Italy's southern coast as would-be refugees fleeing increasing instability in Libya saw their deadliest few days this year with more than 300 drowned, according to Reuters.
The United Nations refugee agency said the worst incident occurred Friday near Garibouli, east of Tripoli, Reuters reported.
On Tuesday, the Italian navy said two of its patrol boats recovered 24 corpses from a capsized smuggler's boat Sunday night, Reuters reported. Their remains, as well as 364 survivors, were headed toward Augusta on Sicily's east coast.
That boat was reportedly carrying at least 270 people when it overturned and sank, but only 19 people survived, according to Melissa Fleming, spokeswoman for the U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees in Geneva, according to Reuters.
The U.N. agency said more than 300 would-be refugees have been killed since Friday and that 1,889 have died since the start of the year, including 1,600 since the beginning of June when the influx grew exponentially as the security situation in Libya deteriorated, Reuters reported.
More than 100,000 people have arrived in Italy so far this year thanks to increasing instability in Libya, where human smugglers operate. Some 42,000 had arrived in all of 2013, according to Reuters.
Most of the migrants hail from Eritrea, Syria, Somalia and other African nations, Reuters reported. They pay hundreds or thousands of euros apiece to Libyan-based smugglers to make the treacherous crossing to Europe.
At a meeting Wednesday with the EU's home affairs commissioner, Italy's interior minister is expected to demand that the European Union do more to help Italy rescue the migrants, according to Reuters.
Italy launched the 9.5 million euro ($13 million) a month "Mare Nostrum" operation last year after more than 360 migrants drowned when their boat capsized off the Italian island of Lampedusa, Reuters reported.
"As more refugees and migrants risk their lives at sea to reach Europe ... urgent action is needed including in finding legal alternatives to these dangerous journeys," Fleming said, according to a U.N. summary of her remarks, according to Reuters.