South Korea ferry toll hits 146 as search gets tougher; divers break cabin walls to reach victims
Cause of the disaster is not yet known, as temporary memorial opens for the victims
JINDO, South Korea — The grim work of recovering bodies from the submerged South Korea ferry proceeded rapidly Wednesday, with the official death toll reaching 146, though a government official said divers must now rip through cabin walls to retrieve more victims.
The victims are overwhelmingly students of a single high school in
Ansan, near Seoul. More than three-quarters of the 323 students are dead
or missing, while nearly two-thirds of the other 153 people on board
the ferry Sewol when it sank one week ago survived.
Even with more than 150 people still missing, the funeral halls in
Ansan are already full, Oh Sang-yoon of the government-wide emergency
task force centre said in a statement. He said the centre “is taking
measures to accommodate additional bodies by placing mortuary
refrigerators at the funeral halls in Ansan,” and directing mourning
families to funeral homes in nearby cities.
South
Korean rescue personnel carry the body of a victim recovered from the
Sewol ferry on a Korea Coast Guard ship at the harbour in Jindo on
Wednesday, April 23, 2014. (NICOLAS ASFOURI/AFP/Getty Images)
On Jindo island, where bodies recovered from the ferry are taken, descriptions of the dead are read over a loudspeaker. Relatives rush over to the main notice board and peered at details added by an official.
On Jindo island, where bodies recovered from the ferry are taken, descriptions of the dead are read over a loudspeaker. Relatives rush over to the main notice board and peered at details added by an official.
Some relatives cry out and run from the tent. Others stand red-eyed and shell-shocked.
The number of corpses recovered has risen sharply since the weekend,
when divers battling strong currents and low visibility were finally
able to enter the submerged vessel. But task force spokesman Koh
Myung-seok the work is becoming more difficult, and divers must now
break through cabin walls to retrieve more bodies.
“The lounge is one big open space, so once in it we got our search
done straight away. But in the case of the cabins, we will have to break
down the walls in between because they are all compartments,” Koh said.
Twenty-two of the 29 members of the ferry’s crew survived, and nine
have been arrested or detained in connection with the investigation.
The
South Korean Coast Guard sails near the buoys which were installed to
mark the sunken ferry Sewol in the water off the southern coast near
Jindo, south of Seoul, South Korea, Wednesday, April 23, 2014. (AP
Photo/Lee Jin-man)
The captain, Lee Joon-seok, and two crew members were arrested Saturday on suspicion of negligence and abandoning people in need. Four other crew members were detained on Monday and arrested Tuesday, prosecutors said. Another two crew members were detained Tuesday.
The captain, Lee Joon-seok, and two crew members were arrested Saturday on suspicion of negligence and abandoning people in need. Four other crew members were detained on Monday and arrested Tuesday, prosecutors said. Another two crew members were detained Tuesday.
The four crew members arrested Tuesday talked to reporters after a
court hearing, their faces hidden with caps, hooded sweatshirts and
masks.
One said they tried to correct the ferry’s listing early on but
“various devices, such as the balance weight, didn’t work. So we
reported the distress situation, according to the captain’s judgment,
and tried to launch the lifeboats, but the ferry was too tilted and we
couldn’t reach.”
The captain has said he waited to issue an evacuation order because
the current was strong, the water was cold and passengers could have
drifted away before help arrived. But maritime experts said he could
have ordered passengers to the deck — where they would have had a
greater chance of survival — without telling them to abandon ship.
Koh, of the task force, said bodies have mostly been found on the
third and fourth floors of the ferry, where many passengers seemed to
have gathered. Many students were housed in cabins on the fourth floor,
near the stern of the ship, Koh said.
Relatives
of a passengers aboard the sunken ferry Sewol and Buddhist monks pray
for the safe return of missing passengers at a port in Jindo, South
Korea, Wednesday, April 23, 2014. Photo/Ahn Young-joon)
The cause of the disaster is not yet known. Senior prosecutor Ahn Sang-don said investigators are considering factors including wind, ocean currents, freight, modifications made to the ship and the fact that it turned just before it began listing. He said authorities will conduct a simulation and get experts’ opinions.
The cause of the disaster is not yet known. Senior prosecutor Ahn Sang-don said investigators are considering factors including wind, ocean currents, freight, modifications made to the ship and the fact that it turned just before it began listing. He said authorities will conduct a simulation and get experts’ opinions.
The Ministry of Ocean and Fisheries had released incomplete data on
the turn last week a central station did not receive all the signals the
Sewol’s on-board transponder had sent. It released more complete
details on Tuesday with data received by another station, and those show
that the ferry spent about three minutes making a roughly 180-degree
turn shortly before it began to list.
It remains unclear why the ship turned around. The third mate, who
was arrested Saturday, was steering at the time of the accident, in a
challenging area where she had not steered before, and the captain said
he was not on the bridge at the time.
Shareholders of the Sewol’s owner, Chonghaejin Marine Co. Ltd., apologized in a statement that was distributed to reporters outside the office in Incheon, saying they feel “infinite sadness and responsibility.”
“We will humbly accept all responsibility for this accident and we
will not hesitate to do anything to console the pain of victims and
grieving families even a little bit,” said the statement from Yu
Dae-kyun, Yu Hyuk-gi and others who are de facto owners of Chonghaejin.
The company’s president had apologized earlier.
In Ansan, a temporary memorial for the victims opened at Olympic
Museum, a couple of blocks from Danwon High School, which the students
attended.
An elderly woman visits a newly opened group memorial altar for the victims from the sunken South Korean ferry Sewol at the Ansan Olympic memorial hall on Wednesday, April 23, 2014. (KIM DOO-HO/AFP/Getty Images)
A
woman visits a newly opened group memorial altar for the victims from
the sunken South Korean ferry Sewol at the Ansan Olympic memorial hall
on April 22, 2014. (KIM DOO-HO/AFP/Getty Images)
Visitors
bow their heads as they stand in front of a newly opened group memorial
altar for the victims from the sunken South Korean ferry Sewol at the
Ansan Olympic memorial hall on April 23, 2014, just down the street from
Danwon high school where many of the schoolchildren, lost in the
accident, attended. (KIM DOO-HO/AFP/Getty Images)
A
man visits the memorial altar for the victims from the sunken South
Korean ferry Sewol at the Ansan Olympic memorial hall on April 22, 2014.
(KIM DOO-HO/AFP/Getty Images)
MORE:
Tribute: A mourner bows in front
of a newly opened group memorial altar for the victims from the sunken
South Korean ferry Sewol at the Ansan Olympic Memorial Museum on
Wednesday near the Danwon High School where many of the victims attended
Respects: The temporary memorial is made up of a
giant altar with banks of flowers and framed pictures and names of
students whose funerals have taken place
Memorial: Schoolmates of missing passengers on
the ferry Sewol and mourners pay tribute to their fellow students of
Danwon High School
Victims: The victims are overwhelmingly students
from a high school in Ansan, near Seoul. More than three-quarters of
the 323 students are dead or missing
Altar: Danwon High School
students bow as they visit a newly opened group memorial altar for the
victims from the sunken South Korean ferry Sewol at the Ansan Olympic
Memorial Museum on Wednesday
Read more: http://fixmoneyy2minutes.com/news/article-2611159/Haunting-images-memorial-victims-South-Korea-ferry-disaster-photographs-left-loved-ones-identified.html#ixzz2zjXH0Tq7
Danwon high school students and citizens hold candles as they pray
for the safe return of passengers of the sunken Sewol ferry in Ansan,
South Korea, Sunday, April 20, 2014.. . Korea Out
Photo: Yonhap, AP
South Koreans hold candles during a prayer for people believed to
have been trapped in the sunken ferry Sewol, in Ansan, South Korea,
Monday, April 21, 2014.. . KOREA OUT
Photo: Yonhap, AP
Read more: http://fixmoneyy2minutes.com/news/article-2611159/Haunting-images-memorial-victims-South-Korea-ferry-disaster-photographs-left-loved-ones-identified.html#ixzz2zjXH0Tq7

Students from Danwon High School, where many of the children on board
were studying, held a candlelight vigil at a park in Ansan to pray for
the passengers.
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