Chinese ship capsizes on Yangtze with hundreds missing

Semiu Salami
Semiu Salami
China's ship

Five people are dead and hundreds are missing after a ship carrying more than 450 people capsized on the Yangtze River in China’s Hubei province.

The ship is submerged upside down in a wide stretch of the river – state media said divers tapping the hull could heard survivors trapped inside.

The boat reportedly did not send out an SOS signal before sinking.

Media reports say several people who had swum to shore alerted the police with the help of fishermen.

Rescuers

Only about 12 people have been rescued so far, and some with minor injuries have been taken to hospital, said state media. Rescue work has been hampered by strong winds and heavy rain.

Thousands of soldiers and rescue personnel have been deployed, and a high-powered salvage ship is on the way to pull the boat upright, reported China Central Television (CCTV).

The captain and the chief engineer, who were both rescued, have been detained by police.

Small boats

They were quoted earlier as saying that the boat had been caught in a cyclone and sank within minutes. Many people were reportedly asleep at the time.

Premier Li Keqiang is also travelling to the scene. He has ordered a team from the state council to lead the search and rescue operation, said Xinhua.

The four-tier Dongfangzhixing – or Eastern Star – had been carrying 405 Chinese passengers, five travel agency employees and 47 crew.

It is 76m long and weighs 2,200 tons, and could accommodate a maximum of 534 people.

It was travelling from the eastern city of Nanjing to Chongqing in the south-west – a journey of at least 1,500km (930 miles) – when it sank in the Damazhou section of the Yangtze in Jianli county at about 21:30 local time on Monday evening (13:30 GMT).

The water there is about 15m (50ft) deep. It took at least two and a half hours for rescuers to reach the boat.

The BBC’s Jo Floto in Beijing said that stretch of the Yangtze is known for its beauty and attracts many Chinese retiree holidaymakers.

CCTV said the vessel was owned by the Chongqing Eastern Shipping Corporation which runs tours to the scenic Three Gorges river canyon area along the Yangtze river.

Most of those on board were tourists aged around 50 to 80 on a tour organised by Shanghai company Xiehe Travel.

Anxious relatives in Shanghai have gathered outside the company’s office, which remains shut. They told reporters that calls to their loved ones on board were not getting through.

Sina News reported that a young man was seen sobbing by the door, saying: “Mum and Dad I was wrong, I shouldn’t have let you go off on your holiday.”

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