Lampedusa boat disaster: Row in Italy over deaths

 Italy's coast guard has denied that it was slow to respond to the sinking of a boat carrying African migrants off the island of Lampedusa on Thursday. The accusations were made by a fisherman who took part in the rescue and alocal newspaper. 

So far, 111 bodies have been recovered, and 155 people survived, but about 200 are still unaccounted for. High winds have prevented divers from reaching the boat, restricting rescuers to an aerial search, the BBC reports. 

France has called for an urgent meeting of EU states following the tragedy. 

"European political officials must talk, and soon," said French Prime Minister Jean-Marc Ayrault. 

"It is up to them to meet to find a proper solution; compassion is not Clandestine immigration' The survivors are to be placed under investigation for "clandestine immigration", as provided for by a controversial immigration law pushed through by right-wing parties in 2002. 

Italy has said it will amend immigration laws and has called for European help. Italian members of parliament have complained that some of its provisions discourage people from helping migrants in distress. 

The fisherman who arrived first at the site of the accident, Vito Fiorino, has accused the coast guard of wasting time by filming footage of rescue efforts. "They refused to take on board some people we'd already saved because they said protocol forbade it," he was quoted as saying by Ansa news agency.

 A report in local newspaper La Sicilia said two boats belonging to Italy's Financial Guard, which carries out a range of police and rescue duties, had remained in port. The coast guard denied that there was any delay in its rescue effort. "After we received the alarm by radio at 07:00 we immediately intervened with out boats, arriving on at the site of the shipwreck at 07:20," it said in a statement. Judicial authorities said they had no evidence of delays. The head of a fishermen's association, Toto Martello, denied in turn reports that three fishermen drove straight past the scene of the accident.
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