Yahoo – AFP,
Neil Connor, 6 June 2015
Jianli
(China) (AFP) - Rescuers extended their search for victims of a Chinese cruise
ship sinking to include a vast stretch of the Yangtze river Saturday, as the
confirmed death toll rose to 396, marking the country's worst shipping disaster
in nearly 70 years.
With most
bodies retrieved from the battered ship, officials widened the search scope to
1,300 kilometres (800 miles) of the Yangtze in the hope of finding 46 people
still unaccounted for, state news agency Xinhua said.
Only 14
survivors have been confirmed out of the 456 people -- mostly tourists aged
over 60 -- on board when the "Eastern Star" rapidly sank on China's
biggest river in a storm on Monday, in the central county of Jianli.
![]() |
Rescue
workers look at the sunken
passenger ship being lifted by cranes in
the Yangtze
river in Jianli in China's
Hubei province on June 5, 2015
(AFP Photo/Johannes
Eisele)
|
The death
toll jumped by over 200 after rescuers used massive cranes to hoist the vessel
out of the water on Friday and began recovering bodies trapped inside.
Xinhua put
the number of dead at 396 as of noon local time (0400 GMT) on Saturday.
The figure
makes it China's worst shipping disaster since 1948, when up to 4,000 on board
the SS Kiangya were killed when it sank near Shanghai.
A
government spokesman said on Thursday that no further survivors are expected to
be found.
Freak
tornado
As images
showed the blue and white vessel's caved-in roof, state broadcaster CCTV said
rescuers' torches were visible inside the ship overnight.
Online
images showed workers wearing surgical suits handling body bags in the vessel's
dark cabins, while others slept on a nearby floating platform, exhausted by
their grim work.
At a nearby
funeral parlour, AFP saw men also dressed in the white suits driving a convoy
of about 20 mini-vans adapted to carry coffins towards the disaster site.
Reports
citing witnesses said the 76.5-metre-long (250 feet) and 2,200-tonne ship
overturned in under a minute, and weather officials said a freak tornado hit
the area at the time.
The vessel
was cited for safety infractions two years ago, according to a notice by the
Nanjing Maritime Bureau, but no further details have been given about the state
of the ship.
![]() |
Cranes
raise the sunken vessel "Eastern Star" (C) in the Yangtze river
in
Jianli, central China's Hubei province (AFP Photo)
|
Investigators
will probe the ship's structure for flaws, CCTV said, after the ruling
Communist party's all-powerful Politburo Standing Committee vowed to leave
"no doubts remaining" about the disaster.
Information
about the sinking and media access to the site have been tightly controlled,
and online criticism of the search operation quickly deleted.
China's
stability-obsessed Communist rulers often seek to contain anger over the
official handling of disasters, fearing that it could spiral into dissent.
Beijing
clamped down on criticism in the wake of the Sichuan earthquake, which killed
tens of thousands in 2008, and when dozens died in a high-speed rail crash in
the eastern city of Wenzhou in 2011.
Angry
scenes
Relatives
of those on board the Eastern Star clashed with police earlier this week, and
an angry woman berated officials at a press conference in Jianli on Friday.
A group of
relatives from Nanjing, the city in the eastern province of Jiangsu where the
boat began its journey, argued with officials from their home town at a meeting
in Jianli on Saturday morning, AFP learned.
![]() |
Local
residents take part in a candlelight
vigil to pay their respects to victims of
the
sunken ship in Jianli, China's Hubei province
on June 4, 2015 (AFP Photo)
|
He
responded to questions by telling relatives they should do his job if they were
not satisfied, she added.
Family
members who emerged from the meeting looked visibly upset as they hugged each
other and walked away arm in arm, shaking their heads.
Other
relatives who had arrived in Jianli were growing impatient at the lack of
information and the lack of access to the disaster zone.
"We
have come all this way, but all we are doing is waiting," said Jin
Weifeng, who travelled from Shanghai to seek news of his mother-in-law Wang
Shuisheng.
A petition
posted by family members on social media service WeChat called for "key
state leaders" to apologise, an investigation, compensation and the
"death sentence" for the ship's captain -- one of the few survivors
of the disaster -- who is in police custody.
Local
reports said other ships in the area on the day of the accident had dropped
anchor after a warning of heavy storms, but the Eastern Star continued on.
More than
3,400 soldiers and 1,700 paramilitary police are part of the rescue effort,
Xinhua reported, with the Transport Ministry saying Saturday that 254
additional vessels and more than 2,500 people would join the search operation.
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