Las Vegas Review-Journal

Budapest tour boat lifted from Danube

Four more bodies found; vessel underwater 12 days

- By Pablo Gorondi The Associated Press

BUDAPEST, Hungary — Rescue crews raised a sunken tour boat out of the Danube River on Tuesday, shortly after four more bodies were recovered from the vessel involved in a collision with a river cruise ship nearly two weeks ago.

A huge floating crane placed the Hableany (Mermaid) on a barge at Margaret Bridge, the site of the tragedy in the Hungarian capital.

Nineteen South Koreans and a Hungarian crewman have been confirmed dead, and eight people are still listed as missing.

Police spokesman Kristof Gal said that although it was not yet officially confirmed, the Hableany’s Hungarian captain and a young South Korean girl are believed to be among the four bodies taken off the boat after it was raised to the river surface.

Seven South Koreans were rescued after the nighttime collision May 29 amid heavy rain.

Gal said the tour boat will be taken on the barge to nearby Csepel Island, where it will be examined by Budapest police as part of their investigat­ion of the crash.

He added that rescuers will also sift through the sediment deposited in the hull of the boat, which spent more than 12 full days underwater, in the search for more victims.

The search for the missing victims will continue along the Hungarian section of the Danube River south of Budapest, Gal said.

Efforts to search for the missing victims of the collision and to raise the Hableany have been hindered by the Danube’s high springtime water levels, which are expected to fall significan­tly over the coming days in Budapest, and the river’s fast flow, as well as near-zero visibility under water.

The captain of the other ship in the collision, the Viking Sigyn, has been under arrest since June 1, suspected of endangerin­g water transport leading to a deadly mass accident.

The Viking Sigyn, which left Budapest less than 48 hours after the collision with the Hableany, is back in Hungary on a scheduled trip and docked at the town of Visegrad, north of Budapest. Police said they inspected the ship again Monday, but they said there were no plans to seize the cruise ship.

 ?? Peter Lakatos The Associated Press ?? A crane pulls the wreckage of a sightseein­g boat, the Hableany, out of the Danube River on Tuesday in Budapest, Hungary.
Peter Lakatos The Associated Press A crane pulls the wreckage of a sightseein­g boat, the Hableany, out of the Danube River on Tuesday in Budapest, Hungary.

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