A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
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Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Tuesday, June 2, 2015
Divers seek survivors trapped inside capsized China ship; hundreds missing
At
least one woman has been rescued after a ship with 458 passengers and
crew on board capsized in China’s Yangtze River. At least five bodies
have also been recovered by search teams. (Reuters)
BEIJING – Divers and other rescue workers battled Tuesday to reach
survivors after hearing cries for help from within a tourist-filled
cruise ship that capsized during a violent storm on China’s Yangtze
River with 458 people on board.
In what could become the worst ferry disaster in China in nearly 70
years, six helicopters were sent to central Hubei province to scour the
waters for survivors, while more than 140 navy frogmen rushed to the
scene.
Some people escaped or were rescued, including several passengers guided
out of the upturned hull after being trapped for hours. But authorities
said more than 400 people remained unaccounted for — mostly older
tourists on a river cruise.
State television showed footage of a rescue worker in an orange life
jacket hammering on the hull of the Eastern Star. He then pressed his
ear to the metal to listen for replies.
Another worker used a power tool to cut through the hull in a desperate
bid to reach people trapped in an air pocket, who were reported to have
been calling for help, according to state media.
Hundreds remain missing after ship sinks in China’s Yangtze River
Crew members said the vessel carrying more than 400 passengers, many of them tourists, got caught in a cyclone.
Some 18 hours after the boat capsized, divers rescued a 65-year-old
woman and a 21-year-old crew member. About a dozen other people swam to
safety or were rescued earlier, officials said.
Six bodies have been recovered.
The captain of the vessel and the chief engineer were among the first to
be rescued, and have been detained by police for questioning.
The death toll seemed likely to surpass the sinking of a ferry in South Korea in April 2014, when 304 people, most of them children, drowned.
It is also likely to go down as the worst ferry disasters in China since
the steamship Kiangya blew up on the Huangpu River in southeast China
in 1948, killing more than 1,000 people.
Most passengers were between 50 and 80 years of age, state media
reported, on an organized 11-day cruise along the Yangtze and its famous
Three Gorges region.
Among
the survivors was 43-year-old Zhang Hui, who was leading the tour
group. Speaking to state news agency Xinhua, he said rain had lashed one
side of the boat and water entered many rooms on Monday evening as
lightning flashed.
He was walking to bed just after 9:30 p.m. as the boat suddenly listed
45 degrees, before capsizing almost immediately afterward.
Zhang said he had managed to grab a lifejacket before being pitched into
the river, where he saw several people around him drifting and calling
for help in the dark waters.
“I was submerged by one wave after another, and I drank a lot of water,” he said.
At one point, another ship passed by, but its crew didn’t see him, he said.
“I told myself, it’ll be fine if I just hang in there a little longer,” he said.
Zhang ending up drifting more than 50 miles downstream over the course
of 10 hours before using tree branches to row his way to shore at
daybreak.
State radio said the four-decked ship had overturned in just two minutes
in what the captain described as a sudden tornado, without issuing a
distress call. The alarm was only raised when a handful of survivors
swam ashore.
Xinhua said initial investigations had established that the ship was not overloaded, and carried enough life jackets.
“There were life vests in prominent positions in every room, and the
boat was open style,” Zhang said, according to Xinhua. “If it hadn’t
capsized so fast, more people would have been saved.”
Nevertheless, questions remained over why the ship had capsized so
suddenly, and why captain had apparently left his sinking ship so
swiftly.
In Shanghai, angry relatives of those on board gathered to seek
information. Among them was 49-year-old accountant Huang Yan, who said
she believed her husband and father were onboard.
“Why did the captain leave the ship while the passengers were still missing?” she shouted, according to the Associated Press.
Chutian Metropolis Daily, a local newspaper, reported that another
tourist boat had been cruising the same section of the river on Monday
night, but had decided to stop for the night near Hubei after
encountering bad weather, while the Eastern Star had carried on.
The Business magazine Caixin said ship positioning data showed the
vessel had changed direction before capsizing, raising questions about
whether that maneuver had contributed to the disaster.
Gu Jinglu and Xu Yangjingjing contributed to this report.

