Las Vegas Review-Journal

Death toll rises to 65 victims

Scarce informatio­n about passengers stirs anger

- By JOHN RUWITCH and ENGEN THAM ReuteRs

JIANLI, China — The death toll from a ship that capsized on China’s Yangtze River has risen to 65, state television reported today, but more than 370 people were still missing and families broke through a police cordon to march to the site and demand answers.

Another 39 bodies were recovered overnight, CCTV said on its microblog. Only 14 survivors, including the captain, have been found since the ship carrying 456 people capsized in a freak tornado Monday night in what could be China’s worst shipping disaster in decades.

But rescuers are not giving up their search of the ship, which was carrying many elderly Chinese tourists. They plan to cut a small rectangula­r hole through the Eastern Star’s upturned hull to get better access, the official Xinhua news agency reported.

“The ship sank in a very short time frame, so there could still be air trapped in the hull,” Li Qixiu of the Naval University of Engineerin­g told Xinhua.

“That means there could still be survivors.”

About 50 family members, frustrated by the paucity of informatio­n coming from authoritie­s, hired a bus to make the eight-hour journey from Nanjing to Jianli county in Hubei, where the ship sank.

The protesters later broke through a cordon of 20-25 paramilita­ry police who had tried to stop them at a roadblock.

June 4 marks the anniversar­y of the 1989 crackdown on pro-democracy demonstrat­ors around Beijing’s Tiananmen Square, and any sort of protest is discourage­d by China’s leaders.

Early today, the deputy police chief of Nanjing told the relatives they could go to the disaster site only in the daytime.

He promised to arrange buses for them to view the boat in the morning but said journalist­s were barred from the trip.

The ship had been on an 11-day voyage upstream from Nanjing, near Shanghai, to Chongqing.

Volunteers from Jianli offered rides and water to the distraught family members on the march, and some people tied yellow ribbons to their car mirrors.

Some relatives have asked the government to release the names of survivors and the dead, while others questioned why most of those rescued were crew members, why the boat did not dock in the storm and why the rescued captain and crew members had time to put on life vests but did not sound any alarm.

The search area has been extended up to 135 miles downstream, suggesting that bodies could have been swept far from where the ship foundered.

 ?? ReuteRs ?? Students pray for passengers on a sunken cruise ship Wednesday at a school in Zhuji, China. More than 400 people remain missing after the vessel capsized in a tornado.
ReuteRs Students pray for passengers on a sunken cruise ship Wednesday at a school in Zhuji, China. More than 400 people remain missing after the vessel capsized in a tornado.

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