The Southland Times

Ceremonies mark 7 days since ship sank in Yangtze

- CHINA Reuters

Chinese officials and rescuers bowed in mourning towards a battered cruise ship which capsized during a storm in the Yangtze River, as the death toll from the disaster reached 406 yesterday, leaving fewer than 40 still missing.

Only 14 survivors, one of them the captain, have been found after the ship carrying 456 overturned in a freak tornado on Monday night in Jianli in Hubei province. Most of the passengers were elderly tourists.

The four-storied ship was righted and raised on Friday, allowing rescuers onto it to look for the remaining missing. The river is being searched as far away as Shanghai for the missing.

Sunday marks seven days since the Eastern Star went down, and according to Chinese tradition is a key date on which to mourn the dead.

State television showed rescue workers and government officials standing on a barge facing the Eastern Star, removing their hats and bowing their heads, as surroundin­g boats sounded their horns.

Families members will also gather near the river for ceremonies.

More than 1400 relatives have come to Jianli, with many expressing frustratio­n at the lack of informatio­n from the government.

On Friday, one burst into a justconclu­ded news conference, publicly accusing the government of treating its people like enemies.

The government says that it is doing everything possible to help the relatives, including providing free accommodat­ion and medical services, and Vice Premier Ma Kai has been dispatched to meet family members personally.

Officials organised for foreign reporters and sat in on an interview with some relatives, who also praised the government’s efforts.

‘‘It made me feel incredibly warm. When he shook my hand and said a few words to me, told us to keep on going. I felt that he didn’t seem like a political leader at all. He was so genial. He was like my own father,’’ Wang Hua, 42, who lost both parents on the ship, told Reuters of her meeting with Ma.

Major state newspapers on Sunday carried the same story by the official Xinhua news agency on their front pages, headlined ‘‘Bearing great responsibi­lity to the people’’ and detailing the government’s efforts.

‘‘In the midst of disaster, we are all of one heart, the whole nation helping each other, staunchly moving forward,’’ it wrote.

The company which operated the ship has apologised for the disaster and said it would ‘‘fully’’ cooperate with the investigat­ion. Beijing has pledged there would be ‘‘no cover-up’’.

Police have detained the captain and chief engineer for questionin­g as part of the investigat­ion.

An initial probe found the ship was not overloaded and had enough life vests on board.

The disaster has now caused a higher toll than the sinking of a ferry in South Korea in April 2014 that killed 304 people, most of them children on a school trip.

It is China’s worst shipping catastroph­e in seven decades.

 ?? Photo: REUTERS ?? Soldiers hold a moment of silence at a ceremony to remember those who died when the Eastern Star went down in the Yangtze River.
Photo: REUTERS Soldiers hold a moment of silence at a ceremony to remember those who died when the Eastern Star went down in the Yangtze River.

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