National Post

Hope fades in sinking of Chinese cruise ship

- BY CHRISTOPHE­R BODEEN

JIANLI, CHINA • Chinese authoritie­s deployed scores more divers and a large crane as they escalated efforts Wednesday to recover more than 410 people believed to be trapped inside an overturned river cruise ship.

The capsizing late Monday of the multi-decked Eastern Star in the Yangtze River is on track to become the country’s deadliest maritime disaster in seven decades. Chinese authoritie­s have launched a high-profile response while tightly controllin­g media coverage.

Premier Li Keqiang, the country’s No. 2 political leader, has travelled to the disaster site in the Hubei province county of Jianli where he urged “all-out,” 24-7 efforts.

Chinese state broadcaste­r CCTV said the bodies of 26 victims have been pulled from the boat, which floated with a sliver of its hull jutting from the grey river. Fourteen people survived, some by swimming ashore and three by being pulled out of the ship by rescuers on Tuesday.

But most of the 456 people on board remain missing. Many were elderly tourists taking in the scenic vistas of the Yangtze on a cruise from Nanjing to the southweste­rn city of Chongqing.

Records from a maritime agency show the capsized ship was cited for safety violations two years ago. Authoritie­s in Nanjing held the ship and five other Yangtze cruise vessels after it found them violating standards during a safety inspection campaign in 2013, according to a report on the city’s Maritime Safety website. It did not specify the Eastern Star’s violations.

The shallow-draft boat, which was not designed to withstand as heavy winds as an ocean-going vessel can, overturned in what Chinese weather authoritie­s have called a cyclone with winds up to 130 kilometres per hour.

“The river ships tend to have a lower standard on wind-resistance and wave-resistance than ocean ships,” Zhong Shoudao, president of the Chongqing Boat Design Institute, said at a news conference with weather and Transporta­tion Ministry officials.

“Under the special circumstan­ce of cyclone, the pressure on the one side of the boat went beyond the standard it was designed for, resulting in the overturnin­g of the boat.

“The boat had life jackets and lifeboats, but due to the sudden capsizing, there was not enough time for people to put on life jackets or for the signals to be sent out.”

The squad of 13 navy divers who searched the boat Tuesday — and pulled out three trapped survivors from air pockets after voices were heard through the hull — was expanded Wednesday to 202, including 45 from civilian rescue services. They were working in shifts virtually around the clock as part of a last-ditch attempt to find survivors, the last of which were rescued Tuesday afternoon.

CCTV said the workers were deciding whether to cut into the overturned hull — an option that would imply hopes still lingered for finding survivors trapped in air pockets — or to bring two salvage ships to the stern and bow to act as a vise keeping the craft in place while a

Until all hope is lost, we will not give up on our final efforts

crane pulls it upright.

Transport Ministry spokesman Xu Chengguang said divers would search the ship for as long as possible.

“Until all hope is lost and more accurate informatio­n becomes available, we will not give up on our final efforts, although I know that our colleagues at the scene are facing a great many difficulti­es,” he said.

 ?? afp / gett yimag es ?? Rescue personnel on Wednesday move the remains of victims from the capsized Chinese cruise ship Eastern Star.
afp / gett yimag es Rescue personnel on Wednesday move the remains of victims from the capsized Chinese cruise ship Eastern Star.

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