The Phnom Penh Post

South Korea ferry workers find human remains

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SALVAGE workers who raised South Korea’s sunken Sewol ferry found bone fragments yesterday believed to be from victims missing since the 2014 disaster, the maritime ministry said.

The wreck was brought to the surface last week in a complex salvage operation, nearly three years after it went down with the death of more than 300 people, and placed onto a semi-submersibl­e ship that will finally bring it to shore.

Almost all the victims were schoolchil­dren and nine bodies were still unaccounte­d for, raising the prospect that they could still be inside the vessel and leaving their families emotionall­y trapped in the grieving process.

Six fragments of bone ranging in length from 4 to 18 centimetre­s were recovered on the deck of the semi-submersibl­e Dockwise White Marlin, Lee Cheol-jo, a senior official in charge of the salvage operation, told reporters.

“They are suspected to have been found among sand that leaked out from an opening at the entrance of the vessel or through a window,” Lee said.

There was no indication whether they were from a single victim, or several individual­s.

Officials from the National Forensic Service as well as the coast guard and the health ministry have been dispatched to identify the remains, a process expected to take around two to three weeks, Lee said.

The operation to raise the 145-metre ferry, which has cost more than $82 million, is believed to be among the largesteve­r recoveries of a wreck in one piece.

The salvage operation had been a key demand of the families of the nine missing victims – four schoolchil­dren, two teachers and a married couple and their child.

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