Yahoo – AFP,
Neil Connor, 2 June 2015
Rescuers pulled at least three people from the wreckage of a capsized Chinese cruise ship Tuesday as fears mounted for the more than 400 people still missing after the boat sank in a storm.
![]() |
Chinese
divers rescue an elderly passenger from the Dongfangzhixing ferry
which sank in
the Yangtze river, Hubei province, on June 2, 2015 (AFP Photo)
|
Rescuers pulled at least three people from the wreckage of a capsized Chinese cruise ship Tuesday as fears mounted for the more than 400 people still missing after the boat sank in a storm.
Just 14
people have been confirmed as surviving after the Dongfangzhixing, or
"Eastern Star," a tourist boat rapidly overturned late Monday on the
Yangtze river in central China, the official Xinhua news agency reported.
Six bodies
have been recovered from the wreckage, leaving hundreds more still missing,
possibly trapped within the ship which apparently sank in a matter of seconds
with 458 people on board, state media said.
![]() |
An elderly
survivor is rescued from the
Dongfangzhixing ferry which sank in the
Yangtze
river on June 2, 2015 (AFP Photo)
|
Television footage
showed rescuers on top of a section of the ship's hull which remained above
water, some pressing their ears against it.
"Rescuers
knocked on the ship and received responses," the Hubei Daily newspaper
said. "Three people were found alive."
Zhang Hui,
a 43-year-old tour guide on board, described a storm roiling the boat which
tilted by as much as 45 degrees just after 9:00 pm local time (1300 GMT) on
Monday, Xinhua said.
"Rain
poured down on the right side of the boat, many rooms were flooded," Zhang
said, according to Xinhua. "Even if the windows were shut, water leaked
through."
Passengers
began taking soaked quilts and TV sets into the ship's hall around 9:20 pm
(1320 GMT), Xinhua quoted Zhang as saying, in what appeared to be an attempt to
keep the items dry.
Passengers
seemed to have little warning before the ship sank minutes later with Zhang
recalling he had "30 seconds to grab a life jacket".
The captain and chief engineer, who were among the few survivors and being questioned by police, both reportedly said it had been caught in a freak "cyclone".
As heavy
rains continued to hit the area, an AFP photographer saw more than a dozen
ambulances driving away from the rescue area, and at least two body bags
apparently containing dead passengers.
CCTV said
the 250-feet (76.5-metre) long vessel had floated three kilometres (1.9 miles)
down river after it capsized in Jianli county, part of the central province of
Hubei.
Teams of
police worked to get small motorboats in the water to search for survivors in
the rain, while other emergency personnel looked on from the shore.
Xinhua
reported that three divers found one 21-year-old man in a small compartment
Tuesday afternoon, saying he was given diving apparatus and able to swim out by
himself.
State
broadcaster CCTV showed rescue workers carrying an elderly woman on a
stretcher, adding that another 65-year-old woman was in "good physical
condition," after being hauled from the boat.
It also
showed Chinese Premier Li Keqiang peering through binoculars and giving
instructions at the scene.
A local man
surnamed Wang told AFP the storm on Monday night was the worst he had seen in
years.
![]() |
Chinese
rescue workers carry a body
from the capsized passenger ship
Dongfangzhixing which sank in the
Yangtze river in Hubei province on
June 2, 2015 (AFP
Photo/
Johannes Eisele)
|
Xinhua said
an investigation by the ministry of transport had determined the ship was not
overloaded and had a sufficient number of life jackets.
There were
458 people on board the Dongfangzhixing when the ship capsized at 9:28 pm, CCTV
said, including 406 Chinese passengers, five travel agency workers and 47 crew
members.
The vessel
was owned by a firm that operates tours in the scenic Three Gorges dam region,
some distance from the accident site.
The boat
sent no emergency signal and seven people from the boat swam to shore to raise
the alarm after it sank, according to reports.
The ship
started operations in 1993 and was due to be retired in three years, the 21st
Century Business Herald quoted an unnamed former senior executive with the
Chongqing Eastern Ship Company as saying.
The
accident occurred in the middle reaches of the Yangtze, a wide and rapidly
flowing waterway which at 6,300 kilometres is Asia's longest river.
Chinese
President Xi Jinping earlier ordered "all-out rescue efforts" to find
any survivors.
The Hubei Daily said about 150 boats -- including about 100 fishing vessels -- and more than 3,000 people were involved in the rescue effort, including 140 divers.
Distraught relatives of the passengers gathered at a Shanghai travel agency on Tuesday, sobbing and pleading for information on their loved ones' fate.
The Hubei Daily said about 150 boats -- including about 100 fishing vessels -- and more than 3,000 people were involved in the rescue effort, including 140 divers.
![]() |
A survivor
is rescued by divers from the Dongfangzhixing vessel which sank
in the Yangtze
river, Hubei province, on June 2, 2015 (AFP Photo)
|
Distraught relatives of the passengers gathered at a Shanghai travel agency on Tuesday, sobbing and pleading for information on their loved ones' fate.
One man
expressed his grief with a tearful apology to his parents, who were among the
hundreds of missing.
"I
still have so many things I want to tell them. I thought they would come back
safe and sound," added the man.
A
64-year-old man surnamed Zhang said he spoke to his wife on the boat Monday
evening hours before the accident, and she told him about poor weather and
heavy rain.






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