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Heart-wrenching video captured a distraught mother — whose boat packed with more than 120 migrants split in half, killing at least 74 — screaming, “I lost my baby! Where’s my baby?”

The 6-year-old girl was among those who perished in the devastating shipwreck Wednesday off the Libyan coast, the latest in a series of migrant vessel sinkings in the Mediterranean, according to Reuters.

So far, 31 bodies have been recovered after the tragedy unfolded as the migrants were headed toward Italy on the primary route for people leaving mostly from Libya and Tunisia on the perilous journey to Europe.

The disaster unfolded just as rescue vessel Open Arms belonging to a Spanish migrant charity was handing out life vests and masks to the passengers.

Just as they began transferring them to safety, the flimsy vessel broke in two, sending them into the cold waters. Rescuers pulled out several people alive, though one of two infants died after being put on the ship.

In a statement about the tragedy off the coast of Khoms, some 75 miles west of the Libyan capital of Tripoli, the UN’s International Organization for Migration said the coast guard and fishermen were searching for survivors, according to Agence France-Presse.

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Refugees and migrants are rescued by members of the Spanish NGO Proactiva Open Arms.
Refugees and migrants are rescued by members of the Spanish NGO Proactiva Open Arms on Wednesday.Sergi Camara/AP
A migrant kisses a baby after they both were rescued by NGO Proactiva Open Arms in the Mediterranean sea.
A migrant kisses a baby after they were rescued by NGO Proactiva Open Arms in the Mediterranean Sea.Sergi Camara/AP
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NGO Proactiva Open Arms members recover a dead body of a migrant in the Mediterranean sea.
NGO Proactiva Open Arms members recover a dead body of a migrant in the Mediterranean Sea.Sergi Camara/AP
A pregnant migrant gets an ultrasound scan aboard a Spanish NGO Proactiva Open Arms rescue boat.
A pregnant migrant gets an ultrasound scan aboard a Spanish NGO Proactiva Open Arms rescue boat.Sergi Camara/AP
A still image taken from a video shows migrants being rescued by crew members of the Spanish search and rescue ship Open Arms.
A still image taken from a video shows migrants being rescued by crew members of the Spanish search and rescue ship Open Arms.Open Arms/Handout via Reuters
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A still image taken from a video shows migrants being rescued by crew members of the Spanish search and rescue ship Open Arms.
A still image taken from a video shows migrants being rescued by crew members of the Spanish search and rescue ship Open Arms.Open Arms/Handout via Reuters
A still image taken from a video shows migrants being rescued by crew members of the Spanish search and rescue ship Open Arms.
A still image taken from a video shows migrants being rescued by crew members of the Spanish search and rescue ship Open Arms.Open Arms/Handout via Reuters
A still image taken from a video shows migrants being rescued by crew members of the Spanish search and rescue ship Open Arms.
A still image taken from a video shows migrants being rescued by crew members of the Spanish search and rescue ship Open Arms.Open Arms/Handout via Reuters
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Life jackets litter the beach off the coast of Libya near the port of al-Khums yesterday.
Life jackets litter the beach off the coast of Libya near the port of al-Khums yesterday.Hussein Ben Mosa/ IOM 2020 via AP
Life jackets litter the beach off the coast of Libya near the port of al-Khums yesterday.
Life jackets litter the beach off the coast of Libya near the port of al-Khums yesterday.Hussein Ben Mosa/IOM 2020 via AP
A migrant reacts aboard a Spanish NGO Proactiva Open Arms rescue boat after being rescued in the Mediterranean Sea.
A migrant reacts aboard a Spanish NGO Proactiva Open Arms rescue boat after being rescued in the Mediterranean Sea.Sergi Camara/AP
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The IOM called it the latest disaster in a “series of tragedies” involving at least eight other shipwrecks in the Mediterranean since the beginning of October.

“The boat was reported to be carrying over 120 people, among them women and children,” the IOM said, adding that 47 survivors had been brought back to shore.

The IOM added that in the past two days, at least 19 other people, including two children, drowned after two boats capsized.

More than 20,000 migrants have died in the last seven years, according to the UN agency.

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