Survivors rescued from a deflating dinghy in the Mediterranean say 50 people died on their journey.
The group of migrants set off from Libya a week ago with 75 people on board, including some women and at least one small child, the survivors added.
A total of 25 people – all of them male – were spotted on board a dinghy on Wednesday by the humanitarian rescue group SOS Mediterranee.
The charity’s ship, Ocean Viking, spotted the struggling rubber vessel.
The boat’s motor had broken during the journey, leaving the migrants adrift.
Of the 25 survivors, two people were unconscious and were evacuated by the Italian military for treatment.
The other 23 were in a serious condition, suffering from exhaustion, dehydration and burns from fuel, the charity added.
SOS Mediterranee spokesman Francesco Creazzo said 12 of the survivors were children. Two of those are not yet teenagers, he said.
They were from Senegal, Mali and The Gambia, he added.
The UN International Organisation for Migration says that, prior to the latest deaths, 227 people have died while taking the perilous central Mediterranean route this year. That’s out of a total 279 deaths in the Mediterranean since 1 January.
A total of 19,562 people arrived in Italy using that route during the same period, it added.
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This story originally appeared on Skynews