Bangkok Post

Police put number missing in ferry disaster at 178

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Nearly 180 passengers are missing after a ferry sank into the depths of a volcanic lake in Indonesia, police said Wednesday, almost tripling initial estimates — but the search-and-rescue agency cautioned it was still unclear how many people were aboard the vessel when it capsized.

The wooden boat, which sank Monday on Sumatra’s Lake Toba, a popular tourist destinatio­n, was thought to be operating illegally, with no manifest or passenger tickets. The situation has sparked confusion — and different estimates from various agencies — about the number of people on board.

Indonesia’s disaster agency, separate to the search-and-rescue body, originally said some 80 people were on the boat along with dozens of motorcycle­s when it overturned and sank.

Police said in a statement Wednesday there were as many as 178 people missing, which if confirmed would make it one of Indonesia’s worst maritime disasters. The estimates are based on locals reporting missing relatives who they believed could have been on the ship.

“But many people got on the boat without a ticket so it’s unclear how many were on board,” Muhammad Syaugi, the head of the search-and-rescue agency, told AFP.

So far, at least three bodies have been found and another 18 people rescued, according to the local disaster agency, as the search turned to recovering victims — including those still trapped inside the sunken boat.

The search-and-rescue agency said search operations would continue for at least a week given the size of the enormous body of water, which fills the crater of a supervolca­no that is believed to have erupted tens of thousands of years ago. It is one of the deepest lakes in the world and covers some 1,145 square kilometres.

On Wednesday the size of the search was increased to around 400 personnel.

“We are looking to search an area as deep as 400 metres, but we haven’t found anything yet because the area is very large,” Mr Syaugi said.

Images from the scene Wednesday showed rescuers covering up the bloated body of a woman who had washed ashore. It was not clear what caused the disaster.

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