‘No possibility’ of survivors in China ship sinking

Published June 6, 2015
Jianli: The capsized cruise ship Eastern Star is being pulled out of the Yangtze River on Friday.—Reuters
Jianli: The capsized cruise ship Eastern Star is being pulled out of the Yangtze River on Friday.—Reuters

JIANLI: Authorities admit there is no hope for more survivors from a capsized Chinese cruise ship, as cranes on Friday slowly raised the sunken vessel with exhausted relatives preparing themselves for further agony.

Just 14 of the 456 people on board the Eastern Star were rescued after it sank on the Yangtze River late on Monday, and “comprehensive research and analysis of the facts” showed the chances of finding anyone still alive were “increasingly slim”, a transport ministry spokesman said.

“Based on the general judgement that there is no possibility of survival” authorities decided to right the ship, Xu Chengguang told a press conferencelate on Thursday.

So far, 97 people are confirmed dead, Xu said, but hundreds were still missing, many believed trapped in the ship’s hull.

The current tally of survivors means that the final toll of dead and missing is likely to reach 442, making the tragedy China’s worst shipping disaster in nearly 70 years, state media have reported.

Rescuers operating massive cranes battled from Thursday night to right the Eastern Star at the site of the disaster in Hubei province’s Jianli county.

Daybreak demonstrated some success, with state media images showing the ship upright but with much of it still below water.

Xu also said that with the aim to “search for and find the missing people in the shortest possible time” and “protect the dignity of the deceased to the greatest extent”, authorities wanted to lift the ship “as soon as possible”, the state-run Xinhua news agency reported.

Workers welded giant hooks onto the hull as they prepared to lift the 76.5 metre long vessel with a reported weight of 2,200 tons in a delicate and risky operation that could have destabilised the wreck and sent it further down the river.

Xu said that the next step is to raise the ship completely above the surface and start searching through it.

Families of those on board gathered in a public square in Jianli, clutching candles and flowers to pray for those lost in the disaster.

Hundreds of people, many of them relatives of the missing who have come from across China, tearfully laid out candles in the shape of crosses, hearts and 6.1 — the date the ferry capsized.

“Stay strong, stay strong,” one woman said to another, as the pair sobbed while clutching flowers.

Days of poor weather that had hampered rescue operations cleared on Friday, while security was increased outside Jianli’s funeral parlour, though families did not appear to be gathering there.

Most of the passengers on the ship were aged over 60 and on a tourist trip when the ship sank, reportedly in less than a minute.

Weather officials said a small but fast-moving tornado hit the area at the time, but few other details have been released. The captain and other crew members have been questioned.

Published in Dawn June 6th, 2015

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