The Freeman

Myanmar ferry death toll may reach 100 — rescuers

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Searchers have recovered 32 bodies after an overloaded ferry sank in central Myanmar and expect to find dozens more dead, officials have said, as workers began raising the boat from the riverbed.

A total of 154 people were rescued alive after the ferry sank early Saturday on the Chindwin river, about 72km (45 miles) north of the city of Monywa. But rescuers have found only corpses floating in the water since then, and fear the toll could reach 100 once they raise the craft.

“So far we have recovered 32 dead bodies,” said Sa Willy Frient, director of the local relief and resettleme­nt department who is overseeing the operation. “We are trying to raise the boat using a crane after tying it with strong ropes. After we lift it out, the death toll will be higher.”

Sa Willy Frient estimated 240 to 250 people— around 100 more than its capacity—were on the boat, along with heavy cargo.

Survivor Hnin Lei Yee, a 27-year-old schoolteac­her, was travelling with her husband and one-year-old daughter to celebrate the Buddhist Thadingyut festival with her family. Her baby was killed in the disaster. She still does not know her husband’s fate.

“It happened very fast,” she told AFP. “The window was open so I had a chance to get out of the boat. “I cannot swim so I had to hold on to a plastic float and finally the rescue boat came to save my life. “In the morning, I heard there was a dead child in the hospital and I went there. I saw my daughter dead,” she said, weeping.

Some 30 teachers were thought to be among the passengers, along with dozens of students from Monywa university and workers heading home for Thadingyut. “I am really so sorry,” said Sai Khaing Myo Tun, vice-president of Myanmar’s teachers’ federation. “This incident has terrified us very much.”

“The teachers often have to use such unsafe transporta­tion, especially when they [come to] get their monthly salary.” Four of the boat’s staff have been arrested and will face legal action. Authoritie­s are still hunting for one crew member and the ferry’s owner.

Local lawmaker Shwin Htay said people were devastated by the scale of the disaster as he called for the boat operators to face justice. “I have never known of a boat sinking where so many people have died in this area,” he told AFP.

Boat accidents are common in Myanmar. People living along the nation’s long coastline and floodprone river systems rely heavily on often overcrowde­d ferries for transport. At least 21 people, including nine children, died in April after a boat capsized off the coast of Myanmar’s western state of Rakhine.

(AFP)

 ?? AGENCE FRANCE PRESSE ?? Government rescue personnel from the Myanmar fire services department search the Chindwin river after a ferry capsized.
AGENCE FRANCE PRESSE Government rescue personnel from the Myanmar fire services department search the Chindwin river after a ferry capsized.
 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? This September 27, 2012, file picture shows an exterior view of Adolf Hitler’s birth house, front, in Braunau am Inn, Austria.
ASSOCIATED PRESS This September 27, 2012, file picture shows an exterior view of Adolf Hitler’s birth house, front, in Braunau am Inn, Austria.

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