Two boats making the hazardous crossing from Turkey capsized in the Aegean Sea off Greek islands yesterday, leaving at least 15 dead, including six children, officials said.
The first shipwreck took place 20 metres (65 feet) from the island of Samos.
The bodies of 10 migrants found locked inside the small boat's cabin, six of them children, were recovered from the capsized vessel, the Greek coastguard said. The body of a young girl was found washed up on a beach, while 15 people were rescued alive, the coastguard said.
Despite the increasingly perilous conditions at sea at the onset of winter, refugees from Syria and other troublespots continue to pile into boats heading west, for fear that Europe is about to close its borders.
The latest tragedies bring the migrant death toll in Greece's waters in the past month to over 80, many of them children, according to AFP's count.
Germany is the preferred destination of most, but the country's ruling coalition is deeply divided over how to handle the influx.
Merkel called the emergency talks after her Bavarian ally, Horst Seehofer of the Christian Social Union (CSU) party, threatened her with unspecified consequences if she did not take action to limit the number of newcomers arriving into Germany yesterday.
"Several points... Still need to be resolved including the issue of 'transit zones'," Merkel's spokesman Steffen Seibert said, referring to a proposal to create airport-style processing points on Germany's borders to allow would-be refugees who do not fulfil asylum criteria to be moved out quickly.
The vast majority of the up to one million people expected to arrive in the country this year are crossing the border from Austria into Bavaria.
While most Germans initially backed Merkel's open-doors policy for those fleeing war and persecution, a growing backlash has piled pressure on the chancellor and exposed rifts within her conservative bloc.
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