Ferry accident on festival eve kills 58
A woman weeps as she and others watch the triple-deck ferry, MV Coco (inset), float after it tipped and its rear portion sank in the Tetulia River on Friday near the coastal town of Bhola, 104 km south of Dhaka, Bangladesh, on Saturday. AP |
DHAKA: A rescue ship righted a capsized ferry yesterday, easing the work of those searching the submerged cabins for scores believed trapped inside more than a day after the boat sank in southern Bangladesh. So far, 58 people have been confirmed dead, authorities said.
The MV Coco was packed with hundreds of travelers leaving Dhaka to head home for the Islamic festival of Eid al-Adha when it went down late on Friday. It started to take on water as it arrived at Nazirhat town in the coastal district of Bhola, 104 km south of the capital.
Authorities said there were no passenger lists, so it was unclear how many people were aboard the vessel, but Dhaka's private ETV television station said it could have been carrying more than 1,500 people. Officials would not say how many remained unaccounted for, but ATN television said it was as many as 80. The boat was approved to carry 1,000 people.
Some survivors said the boat hit a shoal as it approached the dock in Nazirhat, splitting the hull. As passengers scrambled to abandon the vessel, it tipped and partially sank in the Tetulia River.
"As I saw water in the lower deck, I jumped through the window and swam ashore," Shahidul Islam, a survivor, said on Saturday. "Many passengers were frightened after seeing water in the lower deck and started rushing out, causing the boat to tilt on one side."
Yesterday, more than 36 hours after the ferry capsized, a rescue ship used iron ropes to right the submerged ferry, exposing 11 more bodies inside its water-filled hull, local police official Mohammad Mahmud said. Three bodies were pulled from the ferry early in the morning before it was righted.
The discovery of those bodies pushed the death toll to 51, Mahmud said.
Gas torches were used to cut open submerged cabins, and local residents joined divers to search for survivors inside the ferry. Police and fire brigade divers pulled 37 bodies from the sunken part of the vessel before darkness halted rescue work for the night on Saturday, said Saiful Islam and Showkat Hossain, local police officials supervising the effort. Many of the dead were women and children.
AP
(China Daily 11/30/2009 page8)