At least 15 Africans drowned when their boat capsized off Libya, on Sunday, a UN spokeswoman said.
It was the second shipwreck involving migrants seeking a better life in Europe in just over a week.
Safa Msehli, a spokesman for the International Organisation for Migration, said the 15 were among at least 110 migrants on a boat that set off from the Libyan town of Zawiya on Friday.
The boat started to sink early on Sunday and the Libyan coastguard managed to rescue at least 95 migrants, including six women and two children, Ms Msehli said.
She said many of the survivors suffered from burns from engine fuel, and hypothermia, with some taken to hospital.
“It is an additional tragedy that in most cases there is very little search to recover the bodies," Ms Msehli said.
"The sight of bodies washing ashore later has sadly become too familiar."
Sunday’s shipwreck was the latest along the Central Mediterranean migration route.
At least 41 migrants reportedly died last week, part of a group of about 120 migrants on a dinghy that left Libya on February 18.
The majority of the migrants were from Cameroon, Sudan and Mali, an International Organisation for Migration (IOM) representative said.
The humanitarian group Sea-Watch said its rescue vessel Sea-Watch 3 in the Central Mediterranean had 363 rescued migrants aboard, from five operations starting on Friday.
On Sunday, it carried out three operations, including the rescue of 44 migrants whose wooden boat was about to overturn.
It was seen by aircraft operated by the Moonbird humanitarian group, Sea-Watch tweeted.
The Sea Watch 3 has rescued over 3,000 migrants in distress in the Mediterranean Sea since 2017, the NGO said.
Libya has become the major transit point for African and Arab migrants hoping to reach Europe.
The North African country plunged into a civil war after a Nato-backed uprising toppled and killed long-time ruler Muammar Qaddafi in 2011.
Smugglers often pack desperate families into ill-equipped rubber boats that stall and founder along the Central Mediterranean route.
Over the past several years, hundreds of thousands of migrants have reached Europe on their own or after being rescued at sea.
Thousands have drowned along the way.
Others were intercepted and returned to Libya to be left at the mercy of armed groups or confined in squalid detention centres that lack adequate food and water, rights groups say.
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RESULTS
Men
1 Marius Kipserem (KEN) 2:04:04
2 Abraham Kiptum (KEN) 2:04:16
3 Dejene Debela Gonfra (ETH) 2:07:06
4 Thomas Rono (KEN) 2:07:12
5 Stanley Biwott (KEN) 2:09:18
Women
1 Ababel Yeshaneh (ETH) 2:20:16
2 Eunice Chumba (BRN) 2:20:54
3 Gelete Burka (ETH) 2:24:07
4 Chaltu Tafa (ETH) 2:25:09
5 Caroline Kilel (KEN) 2:29:14
The specs
- Engine: 3.9-litre twin-turbo V8
- Power: 640hp
- Torque: 760nm
- On sale: 2026
- Price: Not announced yet
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Maryana Marrash (Aleppo)
A poet and writer, Marrash helped revive the tradition of the salon and was an active part of the Nadha movement, or Arab Renaissance. Born to an established family in Aleppo in Ottoman Syria in 1848, Marrash was educated at missionary schools in Aleppo and Beirut at a time when many women did not receive an education. After touring Europe, she began to host salons where writers played chess and cards, competed in the art of poetry, and discussed literature and politics. An accomplished singer and canon player, music and dancing were a part of these evenings.
Princess Nazil Fadil (Cairo)
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Mayy Ziyadah (Cairo)
Ziyadah was the first to entertain both men and women at her Cairo salon, founded in 1913. The writer, poet, public speaker and critic, her writing explored language, religious identity, language, nationalism and hierarchy. Born in Nazareth, Palestine, to a Lebanese father and Palestinian mother, her salon was open to different social classes and earned comparisons with souq of where Al Khansa herself once recited.
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Moscow claimed it hit the largest military fuel storage facility in Ukraine, triggering a huge fireball at the site.
A plume of black smoke rose from a fuel storage facility in the village of Kalynivka outside Kyiv on Friday after Russia said it had destroyed the military site with Kalibr cruise missiles.
"On the evening of March 24, Kalibr high-precision sea-based cruise missiles attacked a fuel base in the village of Kalynivka near Kyiv," the Russian defence ministry said in a statement.
Ukraine confirmed the strike, saying the village some 40 kilometres south-west of Kyiv was targeted.