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Seven migrants are missing after a suspected crossing of the California coast.

The U.S. Coast Guard announced on Tuesday that the search for seven missing people from a small capsized boat off California near San Diego was called off because there were no survivors. This brings the total number of likely deaths in the suspected migrant-smuggling attempt to 10.

According to Chief Petty Officer Levi Read, the spokesperson for the Coast Guard, the Coast Guard "suspended' its daylong search and rescue operation late Monday night. This means that no new efforts would be made to locate the victims unless there was fresh information justifying it.

Read explained that although no official announcement was made, it was decided to stop the search because of the unlikely chance that anyone would be able to endure the frigid waters, even with flotation for more than a few hours before succumbing from hypothermia.

The "panga", an open-style fishing boat, overturned on Monday morning in rough waters, and the sea temperatures were between 52 and 55 degrees Fahrenheit. This is considered to be a cold water immersion environment.

The boat capsized and seven people were missing. Two children are believed to have been among them. Three other victims were discovered dead shortly after the boat washed up near Torrey Pines State Beach, north of San Diego.

Four of the six survivors were rescued by the police and taken to hospital. One person was in critical condition.

Two other people found at a nearby shore were arrested as suspects for what officials from the Department of Homeland Security said was an attempted smuggling of migrants into the U.S. by sea.

Read reported that at least some of those aboard the panga were from India. A number of Indian passports had been found "on the beach near the spot where the boat washed ashore" about 30 miles north-northeast of the U.S./Mexico border.

The Coast Guard has documented hundreds of similar attempts to cross the sea by migrants in San Diego in recent years. Steve Gorman, Los Angeles; Karen Freifeld, New York; David Gregorio: Editing

(source: Reuters)