Two boats carrying migrants have wrecked off the coast of southern Italy in recent days, leaving 11 people dead and dozens missing, after a search for survivors and bodies continued on June 17.

The Italian coast guard said up to 60 migrants were believed to be missing in the first shipwreck, which is believed to have set off from Turkey, and that a search had been ongoing since the evening of the 16th.

A French tourist boat sent out a distress signal saying it had found a “sinking boat” and rescued 12 migrants, who were then transferred to an Italian coast guard boat and taken to Roccella Ionica in southern Italy, where one of them was later confirmed dead.

The ANSA news agency put the number of missing at about 50, while radio station Radio Radicale put the number at 64. Radio Radicale said they were migrants from Afghanistan and Iran.

Further south, the bodies of 10 migrants were found in a wooden boat off the coast of the island of Lampedusa, German aid group ResQship said on Wednesday.

The group said the ship was “completely flooded and they rescued 51 people, two of whom are unconscious,” adding that they had found 10 bodies on the ship’s lower deck, where water had filled the deck.

ANSA reported that the survivors on the boat were from Bangladesh, Pakistan, Egypt and Syria and had paid around $3,500 each for their passage across the border.