Over 400 still missing in ship disaster

A man is pulled out alive by divers and rescuers. Photo by Reuters
A man is pulled out alive by divers and rescuers. Photo by Reuters

Scores of divers are searching a capsized ship in the Yangtze River for more than 400 missing people, many of them elderly tourists, as the death toll in what could be China's worst shipping disaster in almost 70 years doubled to 14.

State television today carried pictures of rescuers, some standing on the upturned hull of the stricken Eastern Star cruise ship, working through the night. So far their efforts have yielded few successes, with only 14 people found alive.

Among the few rescued was an elderly woman who had been trapped in an air pocket in the ship, which capsized during a freak tornado on the river on Monday night.

The Yangtze disaster could have a higher death toll than the 304 people killed when a ferry sank in South Korea in April 2014. Most of those killed in that incident were children on a school trip.

The Yangtze search area has been expanded up to 220km downstream, state television said, suggesting that many bodies could have been swept far away from where the ship foundered in the rain-swollen river.

Relatives angry at silence  

A total of 458 people, including 47 crew members, were on board the Eastern Star, according to state media. All the 406 passengers on board the ship had arranged the booking through Shanghai-based Xiehe International Travel. The other five were tour guides. 

Relatives, angry at what they perceive as a lack of information, scuffled with officials in Shanghai. The travel agency was locked and they were later escorted to the Shanghai local government office building where they were asked to wait inside a room.

About two dozen affected family members, some crying and others shouting, "Help us", marched down streets in central Shanghai towards the main government office watched by a heavy police presence today.

"We're extremely anxious," said Zhang Yingli, 56, whose brother and wife were on the boat. It's 4.30pm now and we haven't heard anything from anyone except the news. No one has come to reassure us."

An official at the Shanghai government's media office declined to comment when contacted by Reuters.

"I only found out about this on the television news while I was at work and I came here. I cried all the way here and here I can't find anyone, the door is locked," said Wang Sheng, 35, sprawled on a couch wailing for his mother and father who were on board.

According to the travel agent's website, the river cruise originates in Nanjing and winds upstream for 11 days to the southwestern city of Chongqing, stopping at scenic and historic sites along the way.

Many of the relatives said they only learned about the disaster through news broadcasts and were angrily demanding more information.

"We haven't heard anything from any authorities," said Zhang Junmin, 32, whose mother along with her friends and neighbours were on the ship.

In a hotel in Nanjing, relatives of survivors gathered in a conference room and railed at officials for not giving them new information. Three local government officials stood in front of the room trying to soothe the crowd.

"You're not doing anything to help us!" shouted a man with a ponytail and a half-shaved head to the officials.

Several relatives sat slumped in chairs, while others cried, holding their heads in their hands.

Local reporters said they had received a notification from the authorities telling them not to go to the site of the disaster but to cover the news based on reports from state broadcaster CCTV and Xinhua news agency.

Such information control is common in China for major disasters, reflecting the stability-obsessed ruling Communist Party's fears of any kind of unrest.

In a sign of official nervousness about how the disaster may play out, a government document carried by a local Hubei newspaper on its official microblog said that provincial authorities were rushing police to the scene to "ensure social stability".

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