ROME (Reuters) - Migrants barricaded staff inside a reception center in northern Italy in a protest over living conditions there after the death of a young woman, officials said.

The 25-year-old woman from the Ivory Coast died apparently of natural causes on Monday afternoon at the center in Cona, near Venice, the town’s mayor told La Repubblica TV.

Fellow migrants reacted angrily, cutting off the electricity supply to the center, starting fires and blocking the exit, leaving 25 staff members barricaded inside, local media said.

Mayor Alberto Panfilio said calm had been restored at the center, where up to 1,500 people have been placed in a facility originally meant for 15 migrants. Many were housed in tents.

Police had persuaded the protesters to open the gates shortly after midnight on Monday, let the staff leave, and re-connect electricity, local police chief Angelo Sanna told la Nuova di Venezia e Mestre newspaper.

Early reports said the protest had been caused by a delay between the young woman being taken ill and an ambulance arriving to treat her.

However, Panfilio said the ambulance had arrived promptly.

“This death is not directly linked to the high concentration (of people) but I hope it can be useful to change a situation that is no longer sustainable,” he said.

The mayor told local media that the center had opened in 2015. Numbers had ballooned dramatically last year. Cona itself has just some 190 residents.

The center is one of many temporary migrant reception centers in Italy that are housing more than 136,000 people. In the past three years, roughly half a million migrants have arrived in Italy by boat.