Oman Daily Observer

Sunken South Korean passenger ferry salvaged

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SEOUL: A South Korean passenger ferry which capsized in 2014 killing over 300 people, was lifted out of the water on Saturday, rescue officials said. The ferry, Sewol, was successful­ly loaded onto a ship at 4.10 am, a spokespers­on for the Ministry of Oceans and Fisheries told Yonhap news agency.

Over the next two or three days, rescue officials will secure the ferry to the vessel, which has the capacity to transport a load of up to 70,000 tonnes on its deck, before heading to the Mokpo port 87 km away.

It is estimated that it will take one day to reach Mokpo. The placement of Sewol on the semi-submersibl­e vessel was one of the most complicate­d procedures given the fact it was greatly affected by weather and tides.

South Korean officials had planned to complete this step before midnight on Friday, but the process lasted more than seven hours because of the difficulty in turning the direction of the ferry — 6,825 tonnes and a length of 145 metres — and the two tugboats during the 3-km journey.

The South Korean government had promised to carefully remove the ferry in order to find and deliver to the relatives the remains of nine passengers of the Sewol who were never found and were believed to be inside the sunken vessel.

The salvage operation of the Sewol, which lay on the sea bed some 40 metres deep, started on Wednesday.

 ?? — AFP ?? Semi-submersibl­e ship the ‘Dockwise White Marlin’ is positioned beneath the wreck of the Sewol ferry off the coast of South Korea’s southern island of Jindo on Saturday.
— AFP Semi-submersibl­e ship the ‘Dockwise White Marlin’ is positioned beneath the wreck of the Sewol ferry off the coast of South Korea’s southern island of Jindo on Saturday.

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