CAIRO: Egypt recovered at least 11 more bodies on Tuesday from last week’s migrant shipwreck off Egypt’s Mediterranean coast, raising the death toll to 179 people, a local official said. “The sunken boat was pulled out half an hour ago,” Beheira province in northern Egypt spokesman Wahdan al-Sayed told AFP. He said that 11 bodies more bodies had so far been found. Survivors have said up to 450 migrants were on board the overcrowded fishing vessel headed to Italy from Egypt when it keeled over off the port city of Rosetta on September 14. Egypt’s military says 163 survivors have been rescued. On Monday, police detained the owner of the vessel. A judicial source said that he could face charges of human trafficking and involuntary manslaughter. A specialised ship with divers belonging to a petroleum company worked at the site of the shipwreck some 12 kilometres (eight miles) offshore to pull the boat back up to the surface. Survivors have said many migrants were trapped in the boat’s hold when it keeled over. The United Nations refugee agency, UNHCR, said on Friday that most of those rescued were Egyptians but they also included migrants from Sudan, Eritrea, Syria and Ethiopians. “Since 2014, there has been a steady increase in the number of interceptions of refugees and migrants trying to leave Egypt in an irregular manner,” the UNHCR said. “Many refugees and migrants may be using Egypt as a transit country,” it said, adding 2016 was expected to be the deadliest year on record for Mediterranean crossings by migrants.