With faces buried in hands and eyes full of pain, survivors of Italy's latest migrant disaster are trying to make sense of their tragedy.<br/> <br />(SOUNDBITE) (English) UNIDENTIFIED SYRIAN MAN, SAYING:<br/> <br />"The situation was very horrible. It cannot be described."<br/> <br />This man and his family, who are Syrian refugees, are among the 206 survivors sheltered at Malta's Valletta Hospital.<br/> <br />Their boat sank early Friday south of Sicily after leaving Libya.<br/> <br />Italian and Maltese navy ships have recovered 34 bodies from the waters.<br/> <br />The Syrian man said living as a refugee in Libya forced him and his family to leave.<br/> <br />(SOUNDBITE) (English) UNIDENTIFIED SYRIAN MAN, SAYING:<br/> <br />"Because the society is different from the Syrian's and the treatment for the Syrians began to be changed to the worse."<br/> <br />The disaster came just over a week after more than 300 migrants drowned when their boat sank off the coast of Lampedusa, a tiny island between Sicily and Tunisia.<br/> <br />The re